Ser Cortnay Penrose wore no armor. He sat a sorrel stallion, his
standard-bearer a dapple grey. Above them flapped Baratheon’s
crowned stag and the crossed quills of Penrose, white on a russet
field. Ser Cortnay’s spade-shaped beard was russet as well,
though he’d gone wholly bald on top. If the size and splendor
of the king’s party impressed him, it did not show on that
weathered face.
They trotted up with much clinking of chain and rattle of plate.
Even Davos wore mail, though he could not have said why; his
shoulders and lower back ached from the unaccustomed weight. It
made him feel cumbered and foolish, and he wondered once more why
he was here. It is not for me to question the king’s
commands, and yet . . .
Every man of the party was of better birth and higher station
than Davos Seaworth, and the great lords glittered in the morning
sun. Silvered steel and gold inlay brightened their armor, and
their warhelms were crested in a riot of silken plumes, feathers,
and cunningly wrought heraldic beasts with gemstone eyes. Stannis
himself looked out of place in this rich and royal company. Like
Davos, the king was plainly garbed in wool and boiled leather,
though the circlet of red gold about his temples lent him a certain
grandeur. Sunlight flashed off its flame-shaped points whenever he
moved his head.
This was the closest Davos had come to His Grace in the eight
days since Black Betha had joined the rest of the fleet off
Storm’s End. He’d sought an audience within an hour of
his arrival, only to be told that the king was occupied. The king
was often occupied, Davos learned from his son Devan, one of the
royal squires. Now that Stannis Baratheon had come into his power,
the lordlings buzzed around him like flies round a corpse. He looks
half a corpse too, years older than when I left Dragonstone. Devan
said the king scarcely slept of late. “Since Lord Renly died,
he has been troubled by terrible nightmares,” the boy had
confided to his father. “Maester’s potions do not touch
them. Only the Lady Melisandre can soothe him to sleep.” Is that why she shares his pavilion now? Davos wondered. To pray
with him? Or does she have another way to soothe him to sleep? it
was an unworthy question, and one he dared not ask, even of his own
son. Devan was a good boy, but he wore the flaming heart proudly on
his doublet, and his father had seen him at the nightfires as dusk
fell, beseeching the Lord of Light to bring the dawn. He is the
king’s squire, he told himself, it is only to be expected
that he would take the king’s god.
Davos had almost forgotten how high and thick the walls of
Storm’s End loomed up close. King Stannis halted beneath
them, a few feet from Ser Cortnay and his standard-bearer.
“Ser,” he said with stiff courtesy. He made no move to
dismount.
“My lord.” That was less courteous, but not
unexpected.
“It is customary to grant a king the style Your
Grace,” announced Lord Florent. A red gold fox poked its
shining snout out from his breastplate through a circle of lapis
lazuli flowers. Very tall, very courtly, and very rich, the Lord of
Brightwater Keep had been the first of Renly’s bannermen to
declare for Stannis, and the first to renounce his old gods and
take up the Lord of Light. Stannis had left his queen on
Dragonstone along with her uncle Axell, but the queen’s men
were more numerous and powerful than ever, and Alester Florent was
the foremost.
Ser Cortnay Penrose ignored him, preferring to address Stannis.
“This is a notable company. The great lords Estermont, Errol,
and Varner. Ser Jon of the green-apple Fossoways and Ser Bryan of
the red. Lord Caron and Ser Guyard of King Renly’s Rainbow
Guard . . . and the puissant Lord Alester
Florent of Brightwater, to be sure. Is that your Onion Knight I spy
to the rear? Well met, Ser Davos. I fear I do not know the
lady.”
“I am named Melisandre, ser.” She alone came
unarmored, but for her flowing red robes. At her throat the great
ruby drank the daylight. “I serve your king, and the Lord of
Light.”
“I wish you well of them, my lady,” Ser Cortnay
answered, “but I bow to other gods, and a different
king.”
“There is but one true king, and one true god,”
announced Lord Florent.
“Are we here to dispute theology, my lord? Had I known, I
would have brought a septon.”
“You know full well why we are here,” said Stannis.
“You have had a fortnight to consider my offer. You sent your
ravens. No help has come. Nor will it. Storm’s End stands
alone, and I am out of patience. One last time, ser, I command you
to open your gates, and deliver me that which is mine by
rights.”
“And the terms?” asked Ser Cortnay.
“Remain as before,” said Stannis. “I will
pardon you for your treason, as I have pardoned these lords you see
behind me. The men of your garrison will be free to enter my
service or to return unmolested to their homes. You may keep your
weapons and as much property as a man can carry. I will require
your horses and pack animals, however.”
“And what of Edric Storm?”
“My brother’s bastard must be surrendered to
me.”
“Then my answer is still no, my lord.”
The king clenched his jaw. He said nothing.
Melisandre spoke instead. “May the Lord of Light protect
you in your darkness, Ser Cortnay.”
“May the Others bugger your Lord of Light,” Penrose
spat back, “and wipe his arse with that rag you
bear.”
Lord Alester Florent cleared his throat. “Ser Cortnay,
mind your tongue. His Grace means the boy no harm. The child is his
own blood, and mine as well. My niece Delena was the mother, as all
men know. If you will not trust to the king, trust to me. You know
me for a man of honor—”
“I know you for a man of ambition,” Ser Cortnay
broke in. “A man who changes kings and gods the way I change
my boots. As do these other turncloaks I see before me.”
An angry clamor went up from the king’s men. He is not far
wrong, Davos thought. Only a short time before, the Fossoways,
Guyard Morrigen, and the Lords Caron, Varner, Errol, and Estermont
had all belonged to Renly. They had sat in his pavilion, helped him
make his battle plans, plotted how Stannis might be brought low.
And Lord Florent had been with them—he might be Queen
Selyse’s own uncle, but that had not kept the Lord of
Brightwater from bending his knee to Renly when Renly’s star
was rising.
Bryce Caron walked his horse forward a few paces, his long
rainbow-striped cloak twisting in the wind off the bay. “No
man here is a turncloak, ser. My fealty belongs to Storm’s
End, and King Stannis is its rightful
lord . . . and our true king. He is the last of
House Baratheon, Robert’s heir and Renly’s.”
“If that is so, why is the Knight of Flowers not among
you? And where is Mathis Rowan? Randyll Tarly? Lady Oakheart? Why
are they not here in your company, they who loved Renly best? Where
is Brienne of Tarth, I ask you?”
“That one?” Ser Guyard Morrigen laughed harshly.
“She ran. As well she might. Hers was the hand that slew the
king.”
“A lie,” Ser Cortnay said. “I knew Brienne
when she was no more than a girl playing at her father’s feet
in Evenfall Hall, and I knew her still better when the Evenstar
sent her here to Storm’s End. She loved Renly Baratheon from
the first moment she laid eyes on him, a blind man could see
it.”
“To be sure,” declared Lord Florent airily,
“and she would scarcely be the first maid maddened to murder
by a man who spurned her. Though for my own part, I believe it was
Lady Stark who slew the king. She had journeyed all the way from
Riverrun to plead for an alliance, and Renly had refused her. No
doubt she saw him as a danger to her son, and so removed
him.”
“It was Brienne,” insisted Lord Caron. “Ser
Emmon Cuy swore as much before he died. You have my oath on that,
Ser Cortnay.”
Contempt thickened Ser Cortnay’s voice. “And what is
that worth? You wear your cloak of many colors, I see. The one
Renly gave you when you swore your oath to protect him. If he is
dead, how is it you are not?” He turned his scorn on Guyard
Morrigen. “I might ask the same of you, ser. Guyard the
Green, yes? Of the Rainbow Guard? Sworn to give his own life for
his king’s? if I had such a cloak, I would be ashamed to wear
it.”
Morrigen bristled. “Be glad this is a parley, Penrose, or
I would have your tongue for those words.”
“And cast it in the same fire where you left your
manhood?”
“Enough!” Stannis said. “The Lord of Light
willed that my brother die for his treason. Who did the deed
matters not.”
“Not to you, perhaps,” said Ser Cortnay. “I
have heard your proposal, Lord Stannis. Now here is mine.” He
pulled off his glove and flung it full in the king’s face.
“Single combat. Sword, lance, or any weapon you care to name.
Or if you fear to hazard your magic sword and royal skin against an
old man, name you a champion, and I shall do the same.” He
gave Guyard Morrigen and Bryce Caron a scathing look. “Either
of these pups would do nicely, I should think.”
Ser Guyard Morrigen grew dark with fury. “I will take up
the gage, if it please the king.”
“As would I.” Bryce Caron looked to Stannis.
The king ground his teeth. “No.”
Ser Cortnay did not seem surprised. “Is it the justice of
your cause you doubt, my lord, or the strength of your arm? Are you
afraid I’ll piss on your burning sword and put it
out?”
“Do you take me for an utter fool, ser?” asked
Stannis. “I have twenty thousand men. You are besieged by
land and sea. Why would I choose single combat when my eventual
victory is certain?” The king pointed a finger at him.
“I give you fair warning. If you force me to take my castle
by storm, you may expect no mercy. I will hang you for traitors,
every one of you.”
“As the gods will it. Bring on your storm, my lord—and
recall, if you do, the name of this castle.” Ser Cortnay gave
a pull on his reins and rode back toward the gate.
Stannis said no word, but turned his horse around and started
back toward his camp. The others followed. “If we storm these
walls thousands will die,” fretted ancient Lord Estermont,
who was the king’s grandfather on his mother’s side.
“Better to hazard but a single life, surely? Our cause is
righteous, so the gods must surely bless our champion’s arms
with victory.” God, old man, thought Davos. You forget, we have only one now,
Melisandre’s Lord of Light.
Ser Jon Fossoway said, “I would gladly take this challenge
myself, though I’m not half the swordsman Lord Caron is, or
Ser Guyard. Renly left no notable knights at Storm’s End.
Garrison duty is for old men and green boys.”
Lord Caron agreed. “An easy victory, to be sure. And what
glory, to win Storm’s End with a single stroke!”
Stannis raked them all with a look. “You chatter like
magpies, and with less sense. I will have quiet.” The
king’s eyes fell on Davos. “Ser. Ride with me.”
He spurred his horse away from his followers. Only Melisandre kept
pace, bearing the great standard of the fiery heart with the
crowned stag within. As if it had been swallowed whole.
Davos saw the looks that passed between the lordlings as he rode
past them to join the king. These were no onion knights, but proud
men from houses whose names were old in honor. Somehow he knew that
Renly had never chided them in such a fashion. The youngest of the
Baratheons had been born with a gift for easy courtesy that his
brother sadly lacked.
He eased back to a slow trot when his horse came up beside the
king’s. “Your Grace.” Seen at close hand, Stannis
looked worse than Davos had realized from afar. His face had grown
haggard, and he had dark circles under his eyes.
“A smuggler must be a fair judge of men,” the king
said. “What do you make of this Ser Cortnay
Penrose?”
“A stubborn man,” said Davos carefully.
“Hungry for death, I call it. He throws my pardon in my
face. Aye, and throws his life away in the bargain, and the lives
of every man inside those walls. Single combat?” The king
snorted in derision. “No doubt he mistook me for
Robert.”
“More like he was desperate. What other hope does he
have?”
“None. The castle will fall. But how to do it
quickly?” Stannis brooded on that for a moment. Under the
steady clop-clop of hooves, Davos could hear the faint sound of the
king grinding his teeth. “Lord Alester urges me to bring old
Lord Penrose here. Ser Cortnay’s father. You know the man, I
believe?”
“When I came as your envoy, Lord Penrose received me more
courteously than most,” Davos said. “He is an old done
man, sire. Sickly and failing.”
“Florent would have him fail more visibly. In his
son’s sight, with a noose about his neck.”
It was
dangerous to oppose the queen’s men, but Davos had vowed
always to tell his king the truth. “I think that would be ill
done, my liege. Ser Cortnay will watch his father die before he
would ever betray his trust. It would gain us nothing, and bring
dishonor to our cause.”
“What dishonor?” Stannis bristled. “Would you
have me spare the lives of traitors?”
“You have spared the lives of those behind us.”
“Do you scold me for that, smuggler?”
“It is not my place.” Davos feared he had said too
much.
The king was relentless. “You esteem this Penrose more
than you do my lords bannermen. Why?”
“He keeps faith.”
“A misplaced faith in a dead usurper.”
“Yes,” Davos admitted, “but still, he keeps
faith.”
“As those behind us do not?”
Davos had come too far with Stannis to play coy now. “Last
year they were Robert’s men. A moon ago they were
Renly’s. This morning they are yours. Whose will they be on
the morrow?”
And Stannis laughed. A sudden gust, rough and full of scorn.
“I told you, Melisandre,” he said to the red woman,
“my Onion Knight tells me the truth.”
“I see you know him well, Your Grace,” the red woman
said.
“Davos, I have missed you sorely,” the king said.
“Aye, I have a tail of traitors, your nose does not deceive
you. My lords bannermen are inconstant even in their treasons. I
need them, but you should know how it sickens me to pardon such as
these when I have punished better men for lesser crimes. You have
every right to reproach me, Ser Davos.”
“You reproach yourself more than I ever could, Your Grace.
You must have these great lords to win your
throne—”
“Fingers and all, it seems.” Stannis smiled
grimly.
Unthinking, Davos raised his maimed hand to the pouch at his
throat, and felt the fingerbones within. Luck.
The king saw the motion. “Are they still there, Onion
Knight? You have not lost them?”
“No.”
“Why do you keep them? I have often wondered.”
“They remind me of what I was. Where I came from. They
remind me of your justice, my liege.”
“It was justice,” Stannis said. “A good act
does not wash out the bad, nor a bad act the good. Each should have
its own reward. You were a hero and a smuggler.” He glanced
behind at Lord Florent and the others, rainbow knights and
turncloaks, who were following at a distance. “These pardoned
lords would do well to reflect on that. Good men and true will
fight for Joffrey, wrongly believing him the true king. A northman
might even say the same of Robb Stark. But these lords who flocked
to my brother’s banners knew him for a usurper. They turned
their backs on their rightful king for no better reason than dreams
of power and glory, and I have marked them for what they are.
Pardoned them, yes. Forgiven. But not forgotten.” He fell
silent for a moment, brooding on his plans for justice. And then,
abruptly, he said, “What do the smallfolk say of
Renly’s death?”
“They grieve. Your brother was well loved.”
“Fools love a fool,” grumbled Stannis, “but I
grieve for him as well. For the boy he was, not the man he grew to
be.” He was silent for a time, and then he said, “How
did the commons take the news of Cersei’s incest?”
“While we were among them they shouted for King Stannis. I
cannot speak for what they said once we had sailed.”
“So you do not think they believed?”
“When I was smuggling, I learned that some men believe
everything and some nothing. We met both sorts. And there is
another tale being spread as well—”
“Yes.” Stannis bit off the word. “Selyse has
given me horns, and tied a fool’s bells to the end of each.
My daughter fathered by a halfwit jester! A tale as vile as it is
absurd. Renly threw it in my teeth when we met to parley. You would
need to be as mad as Patchface to believe such a thing.”
“That may be so, my liege . . . but
whether they believe the story or no, they delight to tell
it.” In many places it had come before them, poisoning the
well for their own true tale.
“Robert could piss in a cup and men would call it wine,
but I offer them pure cold water and they squint in suspicion and
mutter to each other about how queer it tastes.” Stannis
ground his teeth. “If someone said I had magicked myself into
a boar to kill Robert, likely they would believe that as
well.”
“You cannot stop them talking, my liege,” Davos
said, “but when you take your vengeance on your
brothers’ true killers, the realm will know such tales for
lies.”
Stannis only seemed to half hear him. “I have no doubt
that Cersei had a hand in Robert’s death. I will have justice
for him. Aye, and for Ned Stark and Jon Arryn as well.”
“And for Renly?” The words were out before Davos
could stop to consider them.
For a long time the king did not speak. Then, very softly, he
said, “I dream of it sometimes. Of Renly’s dying. A
green tent, candles, a woman screaming. And blood.” Stannis
looked down at his hands. “I was still abed when he died.
Your Devan will tell you. He tried to wake me. Dawn was nigh and my
lords were waiting, fretting. I should have been ahorse, armored. I
knew Renly would attack at break of day. Devan says I thrashed and
cried out, but what does it matter? It was a dream. I was in my
tent when Renly died, and when I woke my hands were
clean.”
Ser Davos Seaworth could feel his phantom fingertips start to
itch. Something is wrong here, the onetime smuggler thought. Yet he
nodded and said, “I see.”
“Renly offered me a peach. At our parley. Mocked me,
defied me, threatened me, and offered me a peach. I thought he was
drawing a blade and went for mine own. Was that his purpose, to
make me show fear? Or was it one of his pointless jests? When he
spoke of how sweet the peach was, did his words have some hidden
meaning?” The king gave a shake of his head, like a dog
shaking a rabbit to snap its neck. “Only Renly could vex me
so with a piece of fruit. He brought his doom on himself with his
treason, but I did love him, Davos. I know that now. I swear, I
will go to my grave thinking of my brother’s
peach.”
By then they were in amongst the camp, riding past the ordered
rows of tents, the blowing banners, and the stacks of shields and
spears. The stink of horse dung was heavy in the air, mingled with
the woodsmoke and the smell of cooking meat. Stannis reined up long
enough to bark a brusque dismissal to Lord Florent and the others,
commanding them to attend him in his pavilion one hour hence for a
council of war. They bowed their heads and dispersed, while Davos
and Melisandre rode to the king’s pavilion.
The tent had to be large, since it was there his lords bannermen
came to council. Yet there was nothing grand about it. It was a
soldier’s tent of heavy canvas, dyed the dark yellow that
sometimes passed for gold. Only the royal banner that streamed atop
the center pole marked it as a king’s. That, and the guards
without; queen’s men leaning on tall spears, with the badge
of the fiery heart sewn over their own.
Grooms came up to help them dismount. One of the guards relieved
Melisandre of her cumbersome standard, driving the staff deep into
the soft ground. Devan stood to one side of the door, waiting to
lift the flap for the king. An older squire waited beside him.
Stannis took off his crown and handed it to Devan. “Cold
water, cups for two. Davos, attend me. My lady, I shall send for
you when I require you.”
“As the king commands.” Melisandre bowed.
After the brightness of the morning, the interior of the
pavilion seemed cool and dim. Stannis seated himself on a plain
wooden camp stool and waved Davos to another. “One day I may
make you a lord, smuggler. If only to irk Celtigar and Florent. You
will not thank me, though. It will mean you must suffer through
these councils, and feign interest in the braying of
mules.”
“Why do you have them, if they serve no
purpose?”
“The mules love the sound of their own braying, why else?
And I need them to haul my cart. Oh, to be sure, once in a great
while some useful notion is put forth. But not today, I think—ah,
here’s your son with our water.”
Devan set the tray on the table and filled two clay cups. The
king sprinkled a pinch of salt in his cup before he drank; Davos
took his water straight, wishing it were wine. “You were
speaking of your council?”
“Let me tell you how it will go. Lord Velaryon will urge
me to storm the castle walls at first light, grapnels and scaling
ladders against arrows and boiling oil. The young mules will think
this a splendid notion. Estermont will favor settling down to
starve them out, as Tyrell and Redwyne once tried with me. That
might take a year, but old mules are patient. And Lord Caron and
the others who like to kick will want to take up Ser
Cortnay’s gauntlet and hazard all upon a single combat. Each
one imagining he will be my champion and win undying fame.”
The king finished his water. “What would you have me do,
smuggler?”
Davos considered a moment before he answered. “Strike for
King’s Landing at once.”
The king snorted. “And leave Storm’s End
untaken?”
“Ser Cortnay does not have the power to harm you. The
Lannisters do. A siege would take too long, single combat is too
chancy, and an assault would cost thousands of lives with no
certainty of success. And there is no need. Once you dethrone
Joffrey this castle must come to you with all the rest. It is said
about the camp that Lord Tywin Lannister rushes west to rescue
Lannisport from the vengeance of the
northmen . . . ”
“You have a passing clever father, Devan,” the king
told the boy standing by his elbow. “He makes me wish I had
more smugglers in my service. And fewer lords. Though you are wrong
in one respect, Davos. There is a need. If I leave Storm’s
End untaken in my rear, it will be said I was defeated here. And
that I cannot permit. Men do not love me as they loved my brothers.
They follow me because they fear me . . . and
defeat is death to fear. The castle must fall.” His jaw
ground side to side. “Aye, and quickly. Doran Martell has
called his banners and fortified the mountain passes. His
Dornishmen are poised to sweep down onto the Marches. And
Highgarden is far from spent. My brother left the greater part of
his power at Bitterbridge, near sixty thousand foot. I sent my
wife’s brother Ser Errol with Ser Parmen Crane to take them
under my command, but they have not returned. I fear that Ser Loras
Tyrell reached Bitterbridge before my envoys, and took that host
for his own.”
“All the more reason to take King’s Landing as soon
as we may. Salladhor Saan told me—”
“Salladhor Saan thinks only of gold!” Stannis
exploded. “His head is full of dreams of the treasure he
fancies lies under the Red Keep, so let us hear no more of
Salladhor Saan. The day I need military counsel from a Lysene
brigand is the day I put off my crown and take the black.”
The king made a fist. “Are you here to serve me, smuggler? Or
to vex me with arguments?”
“I am yours,” Davos said.
“Then hear me. Ser Cortnay’s lieutenant is cousin to
the Fossoways. Lord Meadows, a green boy of twenty. Should some ill
chance strike down Penrose, command of Storm’s End would pass
to this stripling, and his cousins believe he would accept my terms
and yield up the castle.”
“I remember another stripling who was given command of
Storm’s End. He could not have been much more than
twenty.”
“Lord Meadows is not as stonehead stubborn as I
was.”
“Stubborn or craven, what does it matter? Ser Cortnay
Penrose seemed hale and hearty to me.”
“So did my brother, the day before his death. The night is
dark and full of terrors, Davos.”
Davos Seaworth felt the small hairs rising on the back of his
neck. “My lord, I do not understand you.”
“I do not require your understanding. Only your service.
Ser Cortnay will be dead within the day. Melisandre has seen it in
the flames of the future. His death and the manner of it. He will
not die in knightly combat, needless to say.” Stannis held
out his cup, and Devan filled it again from the flagon. “Her
flames do not lie. She saw Renly’s doom as well. On
Dragonstone she saw it, and told Selyse. Lord Velaryon and your
friend Salladhor Saan would have had me sail against Joffrey,
but Melisandre told me that if I went to Storm’s End, I would
win the best part of my brother’s power, and she was
right.”
“B-but,” Davos stammered, “Lord Renly only
came here because you had laid siege to the castle. He was marching
toward King’s Landing before, against the Lannisters, he
would have—”
Stannis shifted in his seat, frowning. “Was, would have,
what is that? He did what he did. He came here with his banners and
his peaches, to his doom . . . and it was well
for me he did. Melisandre saw another day in her flames as well. A
morrow where Renly rode out of the south in his green armor to
smash my host beneath the walls of King’s Landing. Had I met
my brother there, it might have been me who died in place of
him.”
“Or you might have joined your strength to his to bring
down the Lannisters,” Davos protested. “Why not that?
If she saw two futures, well . . . both cannot
be true.”
King Stannis pointed a finger. “There you err, Onion
Knight. Some lights cast more than one shadow. Stand before the
nightfire and you’ll see for yourself. The flames shift and
dance, never still. The shadows grow tall and short, and every man
casts a dozen. Some are fainter than others, that’s all.
Well, men cast their shadows across the future as well. One shadow
or many. Melisandre sees them all.
“You do not love the woman. I know that, Davos, I am not
blind. My lords mislike her too. Estermont thinks the flaming heart
ill-chosen and begs to fight beneath the crowned stag as of old.
Ser Guyard says a woman should not be my standard-bearer. Others
whisper that she has no place in my war councils, that I ought to
send her back to Asshai, that it is sinful to keep her in my tent
of a night. Aye, they whisper . . . while she
serves.”
“Serves how?” Davos asked, dreading the answer.
“As needed.” The king looked at him. “And
you?”
“I . . . ” Davos licked his
lips. “I am yours to command. What would you have me
do?”
“Nothing you have not done before. Only land a boat
beneath the castle, unseen, in the black of night. Can you do
that?”
“Yes. Tonight?”
The king gave a curt nod. “You will need a small boat. Not
Black Betha. No one must know what you do.”
Davos wanted to protest. He was a knight now, no longer a
smuggler, and he had never been an assassin. Yet when he opened his
mouth, the words would not come. This was Stannis, his just lord,
to whom he owed all he was. And he had his sons to consider as
well. Gods be good, what has she done to him?
“You are quiet,” Stannis observed. And should remain so, Davos told himself, yet instead he said,
“My liege, you must have the castle, I see that now, but
surely there are other ways. Cleaner ways. Let Ser Cortnay keep the
bastard boy and he may well yield.”
“I must have the boy, Davos. Must. Melisandre has seen
that in the flames as well.”
Davos groped for some other answer. “Storm’s End
holds no knight who can match Ser Guyard or Lord Caron, or any of a
hundred others sworn to your service. This single
combat . . . could it be that Ser Cortnay seeks
for a way to yield with honor? Even if it means his own life?”
A troubled look crossed the king’s face like a passing
cloud. “More like he plans some treachery. There will be no
combat of champions. Ser Cortnay was dead before he ever threw that
glove. The flames do not lie, Davos.” Yet they require me to make them true, he thought. It had been a
long time since Davos Seaworth felt so sad.
And so it was that he found himself once more crossing
Shipbreaker Bay in the dark of night, steering a tiny boat with a
black sail. The sky was the same, and the sea. The same salt smell
was in the air, and the water chuckling against the hull was just
as he remembered it. A thousand flickering campfires burned around
the castle, as the fires of the Tyrells and Redwynes had sixteen
years before. But all the rest was different. The last time it was life I brought to Storm’s End, shaped
to look like onions. This time it is death, in the shape of
Melisandre of Asshai. Sixteen years ago, the sails had cracked and
snapped with every shift of wind, until he’d pulled them down
and gone on with muffled oars. Even so, his heart had been in his
gullet. The men on the Redwyne galleys had grown lax after so long,
however, and they had slipped through the cordon smooth as black
satin. This time, the only ships in sight belonged to Stannis, and
the only danger would come from watchers on the castle walls. Even
so, Davos was taut as a bowstring.
Melisandre huddled upon a thwart, lost in the folds of a dark
red cloak that covered her from head to heels, her face a paleness
beneath the cowl. Davos loved the water. He slept best when he had
a deck rocking beneath him, and the sighing of the wind in his
rigging was a sweeter sound to him than any a singer could make
with his harp strings. Even the sea brought him no comfort tonight,
though. “I can smell the fear on you, ser knight,” the
red woman said softly.
“Someone once told me the night is dark and full of
terrors. And tonight I am no knight. Tonight I am Davos the
smuggler again. Would that you were an onion.”
She laughed. “Is it me you fear? Or what we do?”
“What you do. I’ll have no part of it.”
“Your hand raised the sail. Your hand holds the
tiller.”
Silent, Davos tended to his course. The shore was a snarl of
rocks, so he was taking them well out across the bay. He would wait
for the tide to turn before coming about. Storm’s End
dwindled behind them, but the red woman seemed unconcerned.
“Are you a good man, Davos Seaworth?” she asked. Would a good man be doing this? “I am a man,” he
said. “I am kind to my wife, but I have known other women. I
have tried to be a father to my sons, to help make them a place in
this world. Aye, I’ve broken laws, but I never felt evil
until tonight. I would say my parts are mixed, m’lady. Good
and bad.”
“A grey man,” she said. “Neither white nor
black, but partaking of both. Is that what you are, Ser
Davos?”
“What if I am? It seems to me that most men are
grey.”
“If half of an onion is black with rot, it is a rotten
onion. A man is good, or he is evil.”
The fires behind them had melted into one vague glow against the
black sky, and the land was almost out of sight. It was time to
come about. “Watch your head, my lady.” He pushed on
the tiller, and the small boat threw up a curl of black water as
she turned. Melisandre leaned under the swinging yard, one hand on
the gunwale, calm as ever. Wood creaked, canvas cracked, and water
splashed, so loudly a man might swear the castle was sure to hear.
Davos knew better. The endless crash of wave on rock was the only
sound that ever penetrated the massive seaward walls of
Storm’s End, and that but faintly.
A rippling wake spread out behind as they swung back toward the
shore. “You speak of men and onions,” Davos said to
Melisandre. “What of women? Is it not the same for them? Are
you good or evil, my lady?”
That made her chuckle. “Oh, good. I am a knight of sorts
myself, sweet ser. A champion of light and life.”
“Yet you mean to kill a man tonight,” he said.
“As you killed Maester Cressen.”
“Your maester poisoned himself. He meant to poison me, but
I was protected by a greater power and he was not.”
“And Renly Baratheon? Who was it who killed
him?”
Her head turned. Beneath the shadow of the cowl, her eyes burned
like pale red candle flames. “Not I.”
“Liar.” Davos was certain now.
Melisandre laughed again. “You are lost in darkness and
confusion, Ser Davos.”
“And a good thing.” Davos gestured at the distant
lights flickering along the walls of Storm’s End. “Feel
how cold the wind is? The guards will huddle close to those
torches. A little warmth, a little light, they’re a comfort
on a night like this. Yet that will blind them, so they will not
see us pass.” I hope. “The god of darkness protects us
now, my lady. Even you.”
The flames of her eyes seemed to burn a little brighter at that.
“Speak not that name, ser. Lest you draw his black eye upon
us. He protects no man, I promise you. He is the enemy of all that
lives. It is the torches that hide us, you have said so yourself.
Fire. The bright gift of the Lord of Light.”
“Have it your way.”
“His way, rather.”
The wind was shifting, Davos could feel it, see it in the way
the black canvas rippled. He reached for the halyards. “Help
me bring in the sail. I’ll row us the rest of the
way.”
Together they tied off the sail as the boat rocked beneath them.
As Davos unshipped the oars and slid them into the choppy black
water, he said, “Who rowed you to Renly?”
“There was no need,” she said. “He was
unprotected. But here . . . this Storm’s
End is an old place. There are spells woven into the stones. Dark
walls that no shadow can pass—ancient, forgotten, yet still in
place.”
“Shadow?” Davos felt his flesh prickling. “A
shadow is a thing of darkness.”
“You are more ignorant than a child, ser knight. There are
no shadows in the dark. Shadows are the servants of light, the
children of fire. The brightest flame casts the darkest
shadows.”
Frowning, Davos hushed her then. They were coming close to shore
once more, and voices carried across the water. He rowed, the faint
sound of his oars lost in the rhythm of the waves. The seaward side
of Storm’s End perched upon a pale white cliff, the chalky
stone sloping up steeply to half again the height of the massive
curtain wall. A mouth yawned in the cliff, and it was that Davos
steered for, as he had sixteen years before. The tunnel opened on a
cavern under the castle, where the storm lords of old had built
their landing.
The passage was navigable only during high tide, and was never
less than treacherous, but his smuggler’s skills had not
deserted him. Davos threaded their way deftly between the jagged
rocks until the cave mouth loomed up before them. He let the waves
carry them inside. They crashed around him, slamming the boat this
way and that and soaking them to the skin. A half-seen finger of
rock came rushing up out of the gloom, snarling foam, and Davos
barely kept them off it with an oar.
Then they were past, engulfed in darkness, and the waters
smoothed.
The little boat slowed and swirled. The sound of their breathing
echoed until it seemed to surround them. Davos had not expected the
blackness. The last time, torches had burned all along the tunnel,
and the eyes of starving men had peered down through the murder
holes in the ceiling. The portcullis was somewhere ahead, he knew.
Davos used the oars to slow them, and they drifted against it
almost gently.
“This is as far as we go, unless you have a man inside to
lift the gate for us.” His whispers scurried across the
lapping water like a line of mice on soft pink feet.
“Have we passed within the walls?”
“Yes. Beneath. But we can go no farther. The portcullis
goes all the way to the bottom. And the bars are too closely spaced
for even a child to squeeze through.”
There was no answer but a soft rustling. And then a light
bloomed amidst the darkness.
Davos raised a hand to shield his eyes, and his breath caught in
his throat. Melisandre had thrown back her cowl and shrugged out of
the smothering robe. Beneath, she was naked, and huge with child.
Swollen breasts hung heavy against her chest, and her belly bulged
as if near to bursting. “Gods preserve us,” he
whispered, and heard her answering laugh, deep and throaty. Her
eyes were hot coals, and the sweat that dappled her skin seemed to
glow with a light of its own. Melisandre shone.
Panting, she squatted and spread her legs. Blood ran down her
thighs, black as ink. Her cry might have been agony or ecstasy or
both. And Davos saw the crown of the child’s head push its
way out of her. Two arms wriggled free, grasping, black fingers
coiling around Melisandre’s straining thighs, pushing, until
the whole of the shadow slid out into the world and rose taller
than Davos, tall as the tunnel, towering above the boat. He had
only an instant to look at it before it was gone, twisting between
the bars of the portcullis and racing across the surface of the
water, but that instant was long enough.
He knew that shadow. As he knew the man who’d cast it.
Ser Cortnay Penrose wore no armor. He sat a sorrel stallion, his
standard-bearer a dapple grey. Above them flapped Baratheon’s
crowned stag and the crossed quills of Penrose, white on a russet
field. Ser Cortnay’s spade-shaped beard was russet as well,
though he’d gone wholly bald on top. If the size and splendor
of the king’s party impressed him, it did not show on that
weathered face.
They trotted up with much clinking of chain and rattle of plate.
Even Davos wore mail, though he could not have said why; his
shoulders and lower back ached from the unaccustomed weight. It
made him feel cumbered and foolish, and he wondered once more why
he was here. It is not for me to question the king’s
commands, and yet . . .
Every man of the party was of better birth and higher station
than Davos Seaworth, and the great lords glittered in the morning
sun. Silvered steel and gold inlay brightened their armor, and
their warhelms were crested in a riot of silken plumes, feathers,
and cunningly wrought heraldic beasts with gemstone eyes. Stannis
himself looked out of place in this rich and royal company. Like
Davos, the king was plainly garbed in wool and boiled leather,
though the circlet of red gold about his temples lent him a certain
grandeur. Sunlight flashed off its flame-shaped points whenever he
moved his head.
This was the closest Davos had come to His Grace in the eight
days since Black Betha had joined the rest of the fleet off
Storm’s End. He’d sought an audience within an hour of
his arrival, only to be told that the king was occupied. The king
was often occupied, Davos learned from his son Devan, one of the
royal squires. Now that Stannis Baratheon had come into his power,
the lordlings buzzed around him like flies round a corpse. He looks
half a corpse too, years older than when I left Dragonstone. Devan
said the king scarcely slept of late. “Since Lord Renly died,
he has been troubled by terrible nightmares,” the boy had
confided to his father. “Maester’s potions do not touch
them. Only the Lady Melisandre can soothe him to sleep.” Is that why she shares his pavilion now? Davos wondered. To pray
with him? Or does she have another way to soothe him to sleep? it
was an unworthy question, and one he dared not ask, even of his own
son. Devan was a good boy, but he wore the flaming heart proudly on
his doublet, and his father had seen him at the nightfires as dusk
fell, beseeching the Lord of Light to bring the dawn. He is the
king’s squire, he told himself, it is only to be expected
that he would take the king’s god.
Davos had almost forgotten how high and thick the walls of
Storm’s End loomed up close. King Stannis halted beneath
them, a few feet from Ser Cortnay and his standard-bearer.
“Ser,” he said with stiff courtesy. He made no move to
dismount.
“My lord.” That was less courteous, but not
unexpected.
“It is customary to grant a king the style Your
Grace,” announced Lord Florent. A red gold fox poked its
shining snout out from his breastplate through a circle of lapis
lazuli flowers. Very tall, very courtly, and very rich, the Lord of
Brightwater Keep had been the first of Renly’s bannermen to
declare for Stannis, and the first to renounce his old gods and
take up the Lord of Light. Stannis had left his queen on
Dragonstone along with her uncle Axell, but the queen’s men
were more numerous and powerful than ever, and Alester Florent was
the foremost.
Ser Cortnay Penrose ignored him, preferring to address Stannis.
“This is a notable company. The great lords Estermont, Errol,
and Varner. Ser Jon of the green-apple Fossoways and Ser Bryan of
the red. Lord Caron and Ser Guyard of King Renly’s Rainbow
Guard . . . and the puissant Lord Alester
Florent of Brightwater, to be sure. Is that your Onion Knight I spy
to the rear? Well met, Ser Davos. I fear I do not know the
lady.”
“I am named Melisandre, ser.” She alone came
unarmored, but for her flowing red robes. At her throat the great
ruby drank the daylight. “I serve your king, and the Lord of
Light.”
“I wish you well of them, my lady,” Ser Cortnay
answered, “but I bow to other gods, and a different
king.”
“There is but one true king, and one true god,”
announced Lord Florent.
“Are we here to dispute theology, my lord? Had I known, I
would have brought a septon.”
“You know full well why we are here,” said Stannis.
“You have had a fortnight to consider my offer. You sent your
ravens. No help has come. Nor will it. Storm’s End stands
alone, and I am out of patience. One last time, ser, I command you
to open your gates, and deliver me that which is mine by
rights.”
“And the terms?” asked Ser Cortnay.
“Remain as before,” said Stannis. “I will
pardon you for your treason, as I have pardoned these lords you see
behind me. The men of your garrison will be free to enter my
service or to return unmolested to their homes. You may keep your
weapons and as much property as a man can carry. I will require
your horses and pack animals, however.”
“And what of Edric Storm?”
“My brother’s bastard must be surrendered to
me.”
“Then my answer is still no, my lord.”
The king clenched his jaw. He said nothing.
Melisandre spoke instead. “May the Lord of Light protect
you in your darkness, Ser Cortnay.”
“May the Others bugger your Lord of Light,” Penrose
spat back, “and wipe his arse with that rag you
bear.”
Lord Alester Florent cleared his throat. “Ser Cortnay,
mind your tongue. His Grace means the boy no harm. The child is his
own blood, and mine as well. My niece Delena was the mother, as all
men know. If you will not trust to the king, trust to me. You know
me for a man of honor—”
“I know you for a man of ambition,” Ser Cortnay
broke in. “A man who changes kings and gods the way I change
my boots. As do these other turncloaks I see before me.”
An angry clamor went up from the king’s men. He is not far
wrong, Davos thought. Only a short time before, the Fossoways,
Guyard Morrigen, and the Lords Caron, Varner, Errol, and Estermont
had all belonged to Renly. They had sat in his pavilion, helped him
make his battle plans, plotted how Stannis might be brought low.
And Lord Florent had been with them—he might be Queen
Selyse’s own uncle, but that had not kept the Lord of
Brightwater from bending his knee to Renly when Renly’s star
was rising.
Bryce Caron walked his horse forward a few paces, his long
rainbow-striped cloak twisting in the wind off the bay. “No
man here is a turncloak, ser. My fealty belongs to Storm’s
End, and King Stannis is its rightful
lord . . . and our true king. He is the last of
House Baratheon, Robert’s heir and Renly’s.”
“If that is so, why is the Knight of Flowers not among
you? And where is Mathis Rowan? Randyll Tarly? Lady Oakheart? Why
are they not here in your company, they who loved Renly best? Where
is Brienne of Tarth, I ask you?”
“That one?” Ser Guyard Morrigen laughed harshly.
“She ran. As well she might. Hers was the hand that slew the
king.”
“A lie,” Ser Cortnay said. “I knew Brienne
when she was no more than a girl playing at her father’s feet
in Evenfall Hall, and I knew her still better when the Evenstar
sent her here to Storm’s End. She loved Renly Baratheon from
the first moment she laid eyes on him, a blind man could see
it.”
“To be sure,” declared Lord Florent airily,
“and she would scarcely be the first maid maddened to murder
by a man who spurned her. Though for my own part, I believe it was
Lady Stark who slew the king. She had journeyed all the way from
Riverrun to plead for an alliance, and Renly had refused her. No
doubt she saw him as a danger to her son, and so removed
him.”
“It was Brienne,” insisted Lord Caron. “Ser
Emmon Cuy swore as much before he died. You have my oath on that,
Ser Cortnay.”
Contempt thickened Ser Cortnay’s voice. “And what is
that worth? You wear your cloak of many colors, I see. The one
Renly gave you when you swore your oath to protect him. If he is
dead, how is it you are not?” He turned his scorn on Guyard
Morrigen. “I might ask the same of you, ser. Guyard the
Green, yes? Of the Rainbow Guard? Sworn to give his own life for
his king’s? if I had such a cloak, I would be ashamed to wear
it.”
Morrigen bristled. “Be glad this is a parley, Penrose, or
I would have your tongue for those words.”
“And cast it in the same fire where you left your
manhood?”
“Enough!” Stannis said. “The Lord of Light
willed that my brother die for his treason. Who did the deed
matters not.”
“Not to you, perhaps,” said Ser Cortnay. “I
have heard your proposal, Lord Stannis. Now here is mine.” He
pulled off his glove and flung it full in the king’s face.
“Single combat. Sword, lance, or any weapon you care to name.
Or if you fear to hazard your magic sword and royal skin against an
old man, name you a champion, and I shall do the same.” He
gave Guyard Morrigen and Bryce Caron a scathing look. “Either
of these pups would do nicely, I should think.”
Ser Guyard Morrigen grew dark with fury. “I will take up
the gage, if it please the king.”
“As would I.” Bryce Caron looked to Stannis.
The king ground his teeth. “No.”
Ser Cortnay did not seem surprised. “Is it the justice of
your cause you doubt, my lord, or the strength of your arm? Are you
afraid I’ll piss on your burning sword and put it
out?”
“Do you take me for an utter fool, ser?” asked
Stannis. “I have twenty thousand men. You are besieged by
land and sea. Why would I choose single combat when my eventual
victory is certain?” The king pointed a finger at him.
“I give you fair warning. If you force me to take my castle
by storm, you may expect no mercy. I will hang you for traitors,
every one of you.”
“As the gods will it. Bring on your storm, my lord—and
recall, if you do, the name of this castle.” Ser Cortnay gave
a pull on his reins and rode back toward the gate.
Stannis said no word, but turned his horse around and started
back toward his camp. The others followed. “If we storm these
walls thousands will die,” fretted ancient Lord Estermont,
who was the king’s grandfather on his mother’s side.
“Better to hazard but a single life, surely? Our cause is
righteous, so the gods must surely bless our champion’s arms
with victory.” God, old man, thought Davos. You forget, we have only one now,
Melisandre’s Lord of Light.
Ser Jon Fossoway said, “I would gladly take this challenge
myself, though I’m not half the swordsman Lord Caron is, or
Ser Guyard. Renly left no notable knights at Storm’s End.
Garrison duty is for old men and green boys.”
Lord Caron agreed. “An easy victory, to be sure. And what
glory, to win Storm’s End with a single stroke!”
Stannis raked them all with a look. “You chatter like
magpies, and with less sense. I will have quiet.” The
king’s eyes fell on Davos. “Ser. Ride with me.”
He spurred his horse away from his followers. Only Melisandre kept
pace, bearing the great standard of the fiery heart with the
crowned stag within. As if it had been swallowed whole.
Davos saw the looks that passed between the lordlings as he rode
past them to join the king. These were no onion knights, but proud
men from houses whose names were old in honor. Somehow he knew that
Renly had never chided them in such a fashion. The youngest of the
Baratheons had been born with a gift for easy courtesy that his
brother sadly lacked.
He eased back to a slow trot when his horse came up beside the
king’s. “Your Grace.” Seen at close hand, Stannis
looked worse than Davos had realized from afar. His face had grown
haggard, and he had dark circles under his eyes.
“A smuggler must be a fair judge of men,” the king
said. “What do you make of this Ser Cortnay
Penrose?”
“A stubborn man,” said Davos carefully.
“Hungry for death, I call it. He throws my pardon in my
face. Aye, and throws his life away in the bargain, and the lives
of every man inside those walls. Single combat?” The king
snorted in derision. “No doubt he mistook me for
Robert.”
“More like he was desperate. What other hope does he
have?”
“None. The castle will fall. But how to do it
quickly?” Stannis brooded on that for a moment. Under the
steady clop-clop of hooves, Davos could hear the faint sound of the
king grinding his teeth. “Lord Alester urges me to bring old
Lord Penrose here. Ser Cortnay’s father. You know the man, I
believe?”
“When I came as your envoy, Lord Penrose received me more
courteously than most,” Davos said. “He is an old done
man, sire. Sickly and failing.”
“Florent would have him fail more visibly. In his
son’s sight, with a noose about his neck.”
It was
dangerous to oppose the queen’s men, but Davos had vowed
always to tell his king the truth. “I think that would be ill
done, my liege. Ser Cortnay will watch his father die before he
would ever betray his trust. It would gain us nothing, and bring
dishonor to our cause.”
“What dishonor?” Stannis bristled. “Would you
have me spare the lives of traitors?”
“You have spared the lives of those behind us.”
“Do you scold me for that, smuggler?”
“It is not my place.” Davos feared he had said too
much.
The king was relentless. “You esteem this Penrose more
than you do my lords bannermen. Why?”
“He keeps faith.”
“A misplaced faith in a dead usurper.”
“Yes,” Davos admitted, “but still, he keeps
faith.”
“As those behind us do not?”
Davos had come too far with Stannis to play coy now. “Last
year they were Robert’s men. A moon ago they were
Renly’s. This morning they are yours. Whose will they be on
the morrow?”
And Stannis laughed. A sudden gust, rough and full of scorn.
“I told you, Melisandre,” he said to the red woman,
“my Onion Knight tells me the truth.”
“I see you know him well, Your Grace,” the red woman
said.
“Davos, I have missed you sorely,” the king said.
“Aye, I have a tail of traitors, your nose does not deceive
you. My lords bannermen are inconstant even in their treasons. I
need them, but you should know how it sickens me to pardon such as
these when I have punished better men for lesser crimes. You have
every right to reproach me, Ser Davos.”
“You reproach yourself more than I ever could, Your Grace.
You must have these great lords to win your
throne—”
“Fingers and all, it seems.” Stannis smiled
grimly.
Unthinking, Davos raised his maimed hand to the pouch at his
throat, and felt the fingerbones within. Luck.
The king saw the motion. “Are they still there, Onion
Knight? You have not lost them?”
“No.”
“Why do you keep them? I have often wondered.”
“They remind me of what I was. Where I came from. They
remind me of your justice, my liege.”
“It was justice,” Stannis said. “A good act
does not wash out the bad, nor a bad act the good. Each should have
its own reward. You were a hero and a smuggler.” He glanced
behind at Lord Florent and the others, rainbow knights and
turncloaks, who were following at a distance. “These pardoned
lords would do well to reflect on that. Good men and true will
fight for Joffrey, wrongly believing him the true king. A northman
might even say the same of Robb Stark. But these lords who flocked
to my brother’s banners knew him for a usurper. They turned
their backs on their rightful king for no better reason than dreams
of power and glory, and I have marked them for what they are.
Pardoned them, yes. Forgiven. But not forgotten.” He fell
silent for a moment, brooding on his plans for justice. And then,
abruptly, he said, “What do the smallfolk say of
Renly’s death?”
“They grieve. Your brother was well loved.”
“Fools love a fool,” grumbled Stannis, “but I
grieve for him as well. For the boy he was, not the man he grew to
be.” He was silent for a time, and then he said, “How
did the commons take the news of Cersei’s incest?”
“While we were among them they shouted for King Stannis. I
cannot speak for what they said once we had sailed.”
“So you do not think they believed?”
“When I was smuggling, I learned that some men believe
everything and some nothing. We met both sorts. And there is
another tale being spread as well—”
“Yes.” Stannis bit off the word. “Selyse has
given me horns, and tied a fool’s bells to the end of each.
My daughter fathered by a halfwit jester! A tale as vile as it is
absurd. Renly threw it in my teeth when we met to parley. You would
need to be as mad as Patchface to believe such a thing.”
“That may be so, my liege . . . but
whether they believe the story or no, they delight to tell
it.” In many places it had come before them, poisoning the
well for their own true tale.
“Robert could piss in a cup and men would call it wine,
but I offer them pure cold water and they squint in suspicion and
mutter to each other about how queer it tastes.” Stannis
ground his teeth. “If someone said I had magicked myself into
a boar to kill Robert, likely they would believe that as
well.”
“You cannot stop them talking, my liege,” Davos
said, “but when you take your vengeance on your
brothers’ true killers, the realm will know such tales for
lies.”
Stannis only seemed to half hear him. “I have no doubt
that Cersei had a hand in Robert’s death. I will have justice
for him. Aye, and for Ned Stark and Jon Arryn as well.”
“And for Renly?” The words were out before Davos
could stop to consider them.
For a long time the king did not speak. Then, very softly, he
said, “I dream of it sometimes. Of Renly’s dying. A
green tent, candles, a woman screaming. And blood.” Stannis
looked down at his hands. “I was still abed when he died.
Your Devan will tell you. He tried to wake me. Dawn was nigh and my
lords were waiting, fretting. I should have been ahorse, armored. I
knew Renly would attack at break of day. Devan says I thrashed and
cried out, but what does it matter? It was a dream. I was in my
tent when Renly died, and when I woke my hands were
clean.”
Ser Davos Seaworth could feel his phantom fingertips start to
itch. Something is wrong here, the onetime smuggler thought. Yet he
nodded and said, “I see.”
“Renly offered me a peach. At our parley. Mocked me,
defied me, threatened me, and offered me a peach. I thought he was
drawing a blade and went for mine own. Was that his purpose, to
make me show fear? Or was it one of his pointless jests? When he
spoke of how sweet the peach was, did his words have some hidden
meaning?” The king gave a shake of his head, like a dog
shaking a rabbit to snap its neck. “Only Renly could vex me
so with a piece of fruit. He brought his doom on himself with his
treason, but I did love him, Davos. I know that now. I swear, I
will go to my grave thinking of my brother’s
peach.”
By then they were in amongst the camp, riding past the ordered
rows of tents, the blowing banners, and the stacks of shields and
spears. The stink of horse dung was heavy in the air, mingled with
the woodsmoke and the smell of cooking meat. Stannis reined up long
enough to bark a brusque dismissal to Lord Florent and the others,
commanding them to attend him in his pavilion one hour hence for a
council of war. They bowed their heads and dispersed, while Davos
and Melisandre rode to the king’s pavilion.
The tent had to be large, since it was there his lords bannermen
came to council. Yet there was nothing grand about it. It was a
soldier’s tent of heavy canvas, dyed the dark yellow that
sometimes passed for gold. Only the royal banner that streamed atop
the center pole marked it as a king’s. That, and the guards
without; queen’s men leaning on tall spears, with the badge
of the fiery heart sewn over their own.
Grooms came up to help them dismount. One of the guards relieved
Melisandre of her cumbersome standard, driving the staff deep into
the soft ground. Devan stood to one side of the door, waiting to
lift the flap for the king. An older squire waited beside him.
Stannis took off his crown and handed it to Devan. “Cold
water, cups for two. Davos, attend me. My lady, I shall send for
you when I require you.”
“As the king commands.” Melisandre bowed.
After the brightness of the morning, the interior of the
pavilion seemed cool and dim. Stannis seated himself on a plain
wooden camp stool and waved Davos to another. “One day I may
make you a lord, smuggler. If only to irk Celtigar and Florent. You
will not thank me, though. It will mean you must suffer through
these councils, and feign interest in the braying of
mules.”
“Why do you have them, if they serve no
purpose?”
“The mules love the sound of their own braying, why else?
And I need them to haul my cart. Oh, to be sure, once in a great
while some useful notion is put forth. But not today, I think—ah,
here’s your son with our water.”
Devan set the tray on the table and filled two clay cups. The
king sprinkled a pinch of salt in his cup before he drank; Davos
took his water straight, wishing it were wine. “You were
speaking of your council?”
“Let me tell you how it will go. Lord Velaryon will urge
me to storm the castle walls at first light, grapnels and scaling
ladders against arrows and boiling oil. The young mules will think
this a splendid notion. Estermont will favor settling down to
starve them out, as Tyrell and Redwyne once tried with me. That
might take a year, but old mules are patient. And Lord Caron and
the others who like to kick will want to take up Ser
Cortnay’s gauntlet and hazard all upon a single combat. Each
one imagining he will be my champion and win undying fame.”
The king finished his water. “What would you have me do,
smuggler?”
Davos considered a moment before he answered. “Strike for
King’s Landing at once.”
The king snorted. “And leave Storm’s End
untaken?”
“Ser Cortnay does not have the power to harm you. The
Lannisters do. A siege would take too long, single combat is too
chancy, and an assault would cost thousands of lives with no
certainty of success. And there is no need. Once you dethrone
Joffrey this castle must come to you with all the rest. It is said
about the camp that Lord Tywin Lannister rushes west to rescue
Lannisport from the vengeance of the
northmen . . . ”
“You have a passing clever father, Devan,” the king
told the boy standing by his elbow. “He makes me wish I had
more smugglers in my service. And fewer lords. Though you are wrong
in one respect, Davos. There is a need. If I leave Storm’s
End untaken in my rear, it will be said I was defeated here. And
that I cannot permit. Men do not love me as they loved my brothers.
They follow me because they fear me . . . and
defeat is death to fear. The castle must fall.” His jaw
ground side to side. “Aye, and quickly. Doran Martell has
called his banners and fortified the mountain passes. His
Dornishmen are poised to sweep down onto the Marches. And
Highgarden is far from spent. My brother left the greater part of
his power at Bitterbridge, near sixty thousand foot. I sent my
wife’s brother Ser Errol with Ser Parmen Crane to take them
under my command, but they have not returned. I fear that Ser Loras
Tyrell reached Bitterbridge before my envoys, and took that host
for his own.”
“All the more reason to take King’s Landing as soon
as we may. Salladhor Saan told me—”
“Salladhor Saan thinks only of gold!” Stannis
exploded. “His head is full of dreams of the treasure he
fancies lies under the Red Keep, so let us hear no more of
Salladhor Saan. The day I need military counsel from a Lysene
brigand is the day I put off my crown and take the black.”
The king made a fist. “Are you here to serve me, smuggler? Or
to vex me with arguments?”
“I am yours,” Davos said.
“Then hear me. Ser Cortnay’s lieutenant is cousin to
the Fossoways. Lord Meadows, a green boy of twenty. Should some ill
chance strike down Penrose, command of Storm’s End would pass
to this stripling, and his cousins believe he would accept my terms
and yield up the castle.”
“I remember another stripling who was given command of
Storm’s End. He could not have been much more than
twenty.”
“Lord Meadows is not as stonehead stubborn as I
was.”
“Stubborn or craven, what does it matter? Ser Cortnay
Penrose seemed hale and hearty to me.”
“So did my brother, the day before his death. The night is
dark and full of terrors, Davos.”
Davos Seaworth felt the small hairs rising on the back of his
neck. “My lord, I do not understand you.”
“I do not require your understanding. Only your service.
Ser Cortnay will be dead within the day. Melisandre has seen it in
the flames of the future. His death and the manner of it. He will
not die in knightly combat, needless to say.” Stannis held
out his cup, and Devan filled it again from the flagon. “Her
flames do not lie. She saw Renly’s doom as well. On
Dragonstone she saw it, and told Selyse. Lord Velaryon and your
friend Salladhor Saan would have had me sail against Joffrey,
but Melisandre told me that if I went to Storm’s End, I would
win the best part of my brother’s power, and she was
right.”
“B-but,” Davos stammered, “Lord Renly only
came here because you had laid siege to the castle. He was marching
toward King’s Landing before, against the Lannisters, he
would have—”
Stannis shifted in his seat, frowning. “Was, would have,
what is that? He did what he did. He came here with his banners and
his peaches, to his doom . . . and it was well
for me he did. Melisandre saw another day in her flames as well. A
morrow where Renly rode out of the south in his green armor to
smash my host beneath the walls of King’s Landing. Had I met
my brother there, it might have been me who died in place of
him.”
“Or you might have joined your strength to his to bring
down the Lannisters,” Davos protested. “Why not that?
If she saw two futures, well . . . both cannot
be true.”
King Stannis pointed a finger. “There you err, Onion
Knight. Some lights cast more than one shadow. Stand before the
nightfire and you’ll see for yourself. The flames shift and
dance, never still. The shadows grow tall and short, and every man
casts a dozen. Some are fainter than others, that’s all.
Well, men cast their shadows across the future as well. One shadow
or many. Melisandre sees them all.
“You do not love the woman. I know that, Davos, I am not
blind. My lords mislike her too. Estermont thinks the flaming heart
ill-chosen and begs to fight beneath the crowned stag as of old.
Ser Guyard says a woman should not be my standard-bearer. Others
whisper that she has no place in my war councils, that I ought to
send her back to Asshai, that it is sinful to keep her in my tent
of a night. Aye, they whisper . . . while she
serves.”
“Serves how?” Davos asked, dreading the answer.
“As needed.” The king looked at him. “And
you?”
“I . . . ” Davos licked his
lips. “I am yours to command. What would you have me
do?”
“Nothing you have not done before. Only land a boat
beneath the castle, unseen, in the black of night. Can you do
that?”
“Yes. Tonight?”
The king gave a curt nod. “You will need a small boat. Not
Black Betha. No one must know what you do.”
Davos wanted to protest. He was a knight now, no longer a
smuggler, and he had never been an assassin. Yet when he opened his
mouth, the words would not come. This was Stannis, his just lord,
to whom he owed all he was. And he had his sons to consider as
well. Gods be good, what has she done to him?
“You are quiet,” Stannis observed. And should remain so, Davos told himself, yet instead he said,
“My liege, you must have the castle, I see that now, but
surely there are other ways. Cleaner ways. Let Ser Cortnay keep the
bastard boy and he may well yield.”
“I must have the boy, Davos. Must. Melisandre has seen
that in the flames as well.”
Davos groped for some other answer. “Storm’s End
holds no knight who can match Ser Guyard or Lord Caron, or any of a
hundred others sworn to your service. This single
combat . . . could it be that Ser Cortnay seeks
for a way to yield with honor? Even if it means his own life?”
A troubled look crossed the king’s face like a passing
cloud. “More like he plans some treachery. There will be no
combat of champions. Ser Cortnay was dead before he ever threw that
glove. The flames do not lie, Davos.” Yet they require me to make them true, he thought. It had been a
long time since Davos Seaworth felt so sad.
And so it was that he found himself once more crossing
Shipbreaker Bay in the dark of night, steering a tiny boat with a
black sail. The sky was the same, and the sea. The same salt smell
was in the air, and the water chuckling against the hull was just
as he remembered it. A thousand flickering campfires burned around
the castle, as the fires of the Tyrells and Redwynes had sixteen
years before. But all the rest was different. The last time it was life I brought to Storm’s End, shaped
to look like onions. This time it is death, in the shape of
Melisandre of Asshai. Sixteen years ago, the sails had cracked and
snapped with every shift of wind, until he’d pulled them down
and gone on with muffled oars. Even so, his heart had been in his
gullet. The men on the Redwyne galleys had grown lax after so long,
however, and they had slipped through the cordon smooth as black
satin. This time, the only ships in sight belonged to Stannis, and
the only danger would come from watchers on the castle walls. Even
so, Davos was taut as a bowstring.
Melisandre huddled upon a thwart, lost in the folds of a dark
red cloak that covered her from head to heels, her face a paleness
beneath the cowl. Davos loved the water. He slept best when he had
a deck rocking beneath him, and the sighing of the wind in his
rigging was a sweeter sound to him than any a singer could make
with his harp strings. Even the sea brought him no comfort tonight,
though. “I can smell the fear on you, ser knight,” the
red woman said softly.
“Someone once told me the night is dark and full of
terrors. And tonight I am no knight. Tonight I am Davos the
smuggler again. Would that you were an onion.”
She laughed. “Is it me you fear? Or what we do?”
“What you do. I’ll have no part of it.”
“Your hand raised the sail. Your hand holds the
tiller.”
Silent, Davos tended to his course. The shore was a snarl of
rocks, so he was taking them well out across the bay. He would wait
for the tide to turn before coming about. Storm’s End
dwindled behind them, but the red woman seemed unconcerned.
“Are you a good man, Davos Seaworth?” she asked. Would a good man be doing this? “I am a man,” he
said. “I am kind to my wife, but I have known other women. I
have tried to be a father to my sons, to help make them a place in
this world. Aye, I’ve broken laws, but I never felt evil
until tonight. I would say my parts are mixed, m’lady. Good
and bad.”
“A grey man,” she said. “Neither white nor
black, but partaking of both. Is that what you are, Ser
Davos?”
“What if I am? It seems to me that most men are
grey.”
“If half of an onion is black with rot, it is a rotten
onion. A man is good, or he is evil.”
The fires behind them had melted into one vague glow against the
black sky, and the land was almost out of sight. It was time to
come about. “Watch your head, my lady.” He pushed on
the tiller, and the small boat threw up a curl of black water as
she turned. Melisandre leaned under the swinging yard, one hand on
the gunwale, calm as ever. Wood creaked, canvas cracked, and water
splashed, so loudly a man might swear the castle was sure to hear.
Davos knew better. The endless crash of wave on rock was the only
sound that ever penetrated the massive seaward walls of
Storm’s End, and that but faintly.
A rippling wake spread out behind as they swung back toward the
shore. “You speak of men and onions,” Davos said to
Melisandre. “What of women? Is it not the same for them? Are
you good or evil, my lady?”
That made her chuckle. “Oh, good. I am a knight of sorts
myself, sweet ser. A champion of light and life.”
“Yet you mean to kill a man tonight,” he said.
“As you killed Maester Cressen.”
“Your maester poisoned himself. He meant to poison me, but
I was protected by a greater power and he was not.”
“And Renly Baratheon? Who was it who killed
him?”
Her head turned. Beneath the shadow of the cowl, her eyes burned
like pale red candle flames. “Not I.”
“Liar.” Davos was certain now.
Melisandre laughed again. “You are lost in darkness and
confusion, Ser Davos.”
“And a good thing.” Davos gestured at the distant
lights flickering along the walls of Storm’s End. “Feel
how cold the wind is? The guards will huddle close to those
torches. A little warmth, a little light, they’re a comfort
on a night like this. Yet that will blind them, so they will not
see us pass.” I hope. “The god of darkness protects us
now, my lady. Even you.”
The flames of her eyes seemed to burn a little brighter at that.
“Speak not that name, ser. Lest you draw his black eye upon
us. He protects no man, I promise you. He is the enemy of all that
lives. It is the torches that hide us, you have said so yourself.
Fire. The bright gift of the Lord of Light.”
“Have it your way.”
“His way, rather.”
The wind was shifting, Davos could feel it, see it in the way
the black canvas rippled. He reached for the halyards. “Help
me bring in the sail. I’ll row us the rest of the
way.”
Together they tied off the sail as the boat rocked beneath them.
As Davos unshipped the oars and slid them into the choppy black
water, he said, “Who rowed you to Renly?”
“There was no need,” she said. “He was
unprotected. But here . . . this Storm’s
End is an old place. There are spells woven into the stones. Dark
walls that no shadow can pass—ancient, forgotten, yet still in
place.”
“Shadow?” Davos felt his flesh prickling. “A
shadow is a thing of darkness.”
“You are more ignorant than a child, ser knight. There are
no shadows in the dark. Shadows are the servants of light, the
children of fire. The brightest flame casts the darkest
shadows.”
Frowning, Davos hushed her then. They were coming close to shore
once more, and voices carried across the water. He rowed, the faint
sound of his oars lost in the rhythm of the waves. The seaward side
of Storm’s End perched upon a pale white cliff, the chalky
stone sloping up steeply to half again the height of the massive
curtain wall. A mouth yawned in the cliff, and it was that Davos
steered for, as he had sixteen years before. The tunnel opened on a
cavern under the castle, where the storm lords of old had built
their landing.
The passage was navigable only during high tide, and was never
less than treacherous, but his smuggler’s skills had not
deserted him. Davos threaded their way deftly between the jagged
rocks until the cave mouth loomed up before them. He let the waves
carry them inside. They crashed around him, slamming the boat this
way and that and soaking them to the skin. A half-seen finger of
rock came rushing up out of the gloom, snarling foam, and Davos
barely kept them off it with an oar.
Then they were past, engulfed in darkness, and the waters
smoothed.
The little boat slowed and swirled. The sound of their breathing
echoed until it seemed to surround them. Davos had not expected the
blackness. The last time, torches had burned all along the tunnel,
and the eyes of starving men had peered down through the murder
holes in the ceiling. The portcullis was somewhere ahead, he knew.
Davos used the oars to slow them, and they drifted against it
almost gently.
“This is as far as we go, unless you have a man inside to
lift the gate for us.” His whispers scurried across the
lapping water like a line of mice on soft pink feet.
“Have we passed within the walls?”
“Yes. Beneath. But we can go no farther. The portcullis
goes all the way to the bottom. And the bars are too closely spaced
for even a child to squeeze through.”
There was no answer but a soft rustling. And then a light
bloomed amidst the darkness.
Davos raised a hand to shield his eyes, and his breath caught in
his throat. Melisandre had thrown back her cowl and shrugged out of
the smothering robe. Beneath, she was naked, and huge with child.
Swollen breasts hung heavy against her chest, and her belly bulged
as if near to bursting. “Gods preserve us,” he
whispered, and heard her answering laugh, deep and throaty. Her
eyes were hot coals, and the sweat that dappled her skin seemed to
glow with a light of its own. Melisandre shone.
Panting, she squatted and spread her legs. Blood ran down her
thighs, black as ink. Her cry might have been agony or ecstasy or
both. And Davos saw the crown of the child’s head push its
way out of her. Two arms wriggled free, grasping, black fingers
coiling around Melisandre’s straining thighs, pushing, until
the whole of the shadow slid out into the world and rose taller
than Davos, tall as the tunnel, towering above the boat. He had
only an instant to look at it before it was gone, twisting between
the bars of the portcullis and racing across the surface of the
water, but that instant was long enough.
He knew that shadow. As he knew the man who’d cast it.