The rains came and went, but there was more grey sky than blue,
and all the streams were running high. On the morning of the third
day, Arya noticed that the moss was growing mostly on the wrong
side of the trees. “We’re going the wrong way,”
she said to Gendry, as they rode past an especially mossy elm.
“We’re going south. See how the moss is growing on the
trunk?”
He pushed thick black hair from eyes and said,
“We’re following the road, that’s all. The road
goes south here.” We’ve been going south all day, she wanted to tell him.
And yesterday too, when we were riding along that streambed. But
she hadn’t been paying close attention yesterday, so she
couldn’t be certain. “I think we’re lost,”
she said in a low voice. “We shouldn’t have left the
river. All we had to do was follow it.”
“The river bends and loops,” said Gendry.
“This is just a shorter way, I bet. Some secret outlaw way.
Lem and Tom and them have been living here for years.”
That was true. Arya bit her lip. “But the
moss . . . ”
“The way it’s raining, we’ll have moss growing
from our ears before long,” Gendry complained.
“Only from our south ear,” Arya declared stubbornly.
There was no use trying to convince the Bull of anything. Still, he
was the only true friend she had, now that Hot Pie had left
them.
“Sharna says she needs me to bake bread,” he’d
told her, the day they rode. “Anyhow I’m tired of rain
and saddlesores and being scared all the time. There’s ale
here, and rabbit to eat, and the bread will be better when I make
it. You’ll see, when you come back. You will come back,
won’t you? When the war’s done?” He remembered
who she was then, and added, “My lady,” reddening.
Arya didn’t know if the war would ever be done, but she
had nodded. “I’m sorry I beat you that time,” she
said. Hot Pie was stupid and craven, but he’d been with her
all the way from King’s Landing and she’d gotten used
to him. “I broke your nose.”
“You broke Lem’s too.” Hot Pie grinned.
“That was good.”
“Lem didn’t think so,” Arya said glumly. Then
it was time to go. When Hot Pie asked if he might kiss
milady’s hand, she punched his shoulder. “Don’t
call me that. You’re Hot Pie, and I’m Arry.”
“I’m not Hot Pie here. Sharna just calls me Boy. The
same as she calls the other boy. It’s going to be
confusing.”
She missed him more than she thought she would, but
Harwin made up for it some. She had told him about his father
Hullen, and how she’d found him dying by the stables in the
Red Keep, the day she fled. “He always said he’d die in
a stable,” Harwin said, “but we all thought some
bad-tempered stallion would be his death, not a pack of
lions.” Arya told of Yoren and their escape from King’s
Landing as well, and much that had happened since, but she left out
the stableboy she’d stabbed with Needle, and the guard whose
throat she’d cut to get out of Harrenhal. Telling Harwin
would be almost like telling her father, and there were some things
that she could not bear having her father know.
Nor did she speak of Jaqen H’ghar and the three deaths he’d
owed and paid. The iron coin he’d given her Arya kept tucked
away beneath her belt, but sometimes at night she would take it out
and remember how his face had melted and changed when he ran his
hand across it. “Valar morghulis,” she would say under
her breath. “Ser Gregor, Dunsen, Polliver, Raff the
Sweetling. The Tickler and the Hound. Ser Ilyn, Ser Meryn, Queen
Cersei, King Joffrey.”
Only six Winterfell men remained of the twenty her father had
sent west with Beric Dondarrion, Harwin told her, and they were
scattered. “It was a trap, milady. Lord Tywin sent his
Mountain across the Red Fork with fire and sword, hoping to draw
your lord father. He planned for Lord Eddard to come west himself
to deal with Gregor Clegane. If he had he would have been killed,
or taken prisoner and traded for the Imp, who was your lady
mother’s captive at the time. Only the Kingslayer never knew
Lord Tywin’s plan, and when he heard about his
brother’s capture he attacked your father in the streets of
King’s Landing.”
“I remember,” said Arya. “He killed
Jory.” Jory had always smiled at her, when he wasn’t
telling her to get from underfoot.
“He killed Jory,” Harwin agreed, “and your
father’s leg was broken when his horse fell on him. So Lord
Eddard couldn’t go west. He sent Lord Beric instead, with
twenty of his own men and twenty from Winterfell, me among them.
There were others besides. Thoros and Ser Raymun Darry and their
men, Ser Gladden Wylde, a lord named Lothar Mallery. But Gregor was
waiting for us at the Mummer’s Ford, with men concealed on
both banks. As we crossed he fell upon us from front and rear.
“I saw the Mountain slay Raymun Darry with a single blow
so terrible that it took Darry’s arm off at the elbow and
killed the horse beneath him too. Gladden Wylde died there with
him, and Lord Mallery was ridden down and drowned. We had lions on
every side, and I thought I was doomed with the rest, but Alyn
shouted commands and restored order to our ranks, and those still a
horse rallied around Thoros and cut our way free. Six score
we’d been that morning. By dark no more than two score were
left, and Lord Beric was gravely wounded. Thoros drew a foot of
lance from his chest that night, and poured boiling wine into the
hole it left.
“Every man of us was certain his lordship would be dead by
daybreak. But Thoros prayed with him all night beside the fire, and
when dawn came, he was still alive, and stronger than he’d
been. It was a fortnight before he could mount a horse, but his
courage kept us strong. He told us that our war had not ended at
the Mummer’s Ford, but only begun there, and that every man
of ours who’d fallen would be avenged tenfold.
“By then the fighting had passed by us. The
Mountain’s men were only the van of Lord Tywin’s host.
They crossed the Red Fork in strength and swept up into the
riverlands, burning everything in their path. We were so few that
all we could do was harry their rear, but we told each other that
we’d join up with King Robert when he marched west to crush
Lord Tywin’s rebellion. Only then we heard that Robert was
dead, and Lord Eddard as well, and Cersei Lannister’s whelp
had ascended the Iron Throne.
“That turned the whole world on its head. We’d been
sent out by the King’s Hand to deal with outlaws, you see,
but now we were the outlaws, and Lord Tywin was the Hand of the
King. There was some wanted to yield then, but Lord Beric
wouldn’t hear of it. We were still king’s men, he said,
and these were the king’s people the lions were savaging. If
we could not fight for Robert, we would fight for them, until every
man of us was dead. And so we did, but as we fought something queer
happened. For every man we lost, two showed up to take his place. A
few were knights or squires, of gentle birth, but most were common
men—fieldhands and fiddlers and innkeeps, servants and shoemakers,
even two septons. Men of all sorts, and women too, children,
dogs . . . ”
“Dogs?” said Arya.
“Aye.” Harwin grinned. “One of our lads keeps
the meanest dogs you’d ever want to see.”
“I wish I had a good mean dog,” said Arya wistfully.
“A lion-killing dog.” She’d had a direwolf once,
Nymeria, but she’d thrown rocks at her until she fled, to
keep the queen from killing her. Could a direwolf kill a lion? she
wondered.
It rained again that afternoon, and long into the evening.
Thankfully the outlaws had secret friends all over, so they did not
need to camp out in the open or seek shelter beneath some leaky
bower, as she and Hot Pie and Gendry had done so often.
That night they sheltered in a burned, abandoned village. At
least it seemed to be abandoned, until Jack-Be-Lucky blew two short
blasts and two long ones on his hunting horn. Then all sorts of
people came crawling out of the ruins and up from secret cellars.
They had ale and dried apples and some stale barley bread, and the
outlaws had a goose that Anguy had brought down on the ride, so
supper that night was almost a feast.
Arya was sucking the last bit of meat off a wing when one of the
villagers turned to Lem Lemoncloak and said, “There were men
through here not two days past, looking for the
Kingslayer.”
Lem snorted. “They’d do better looking in Riverrun.
Down in the deepest dungeons, where it’s nice and
damp.” His nose looked like a squashed apple, red and raw and
swollen, and his mood was foul.
“No,” another villager said. “He’s
escaped.” The Kingslayer. Arya could feel the hair on the back of her neck
prickling. She held her breath to listen.
“Could that be true?” Tom o’ Sevens said.
“I’ll not believe it,” said the one-eyed man
in the rusty pothelm. The other outlaws called him Jack-Be-Lucky,
though losing an eye didn’t seem very lucky to Arya.
“I’ve had me a taste o’ them dungeons. How could
he escape?”
The villagers could only shrug at that. Greenbeard stroked his
thick grey-and-green whiskers and said, “The wolves will
drown in blood if the Kingslayer’s loose again. Thoros must
be told. The Lord of Light will show him Lannister in the
flames.”
“There’s a fine fire burning here,” said
Anguy, smiling.
Greenbeard laughed, and cuffed the archer’s ear. “Do
I look a priest to you, Archer? When Pello of Tyrosh peers into the
fire, the cinders singe his beard.”
Lem cracked his knuckles and said, “Wouldn’t Lord
Beric love to capture Jaime Lannister,
though . . . ”
“Would he hang him, Lem?” one of the village women
asked. “It’d be half a shame to hang a man as pretty as
that one.”
“A trial first!” said Anguy. “Lord Beric
always gives them a trial, you know that.” He smiled.
“Then he hangs them.”
There was laughter all around. Then Tom drew his fingers across
the strings of his woodharp and broke into soft song.
The brothers of the Kingswood,
they were an outlaw band.
The forest was their castle,
but they roamed across the land.
No man’s gold was safe from them,
nor any maiden’s hand.
Oh, the brothers of the Kingswood,
that fearsome outlaw
band . . .
Warm and dry in a corner between Gendry and Harwin, Arya listened
to the singing for a time, then closed her eyes and drifted off to
sleep. She dreamt of home; not Riverrun, but Winterfell. It was not
a good dream, though. She was alone outside the castle, up to her
knees in mud. She could see the grey walls ahead of her, but when
she tried to reach the gates every step seemed harder than the one
before, and the castle faded before her, until it looked more like
smoke than granite. And there were wolves as well, gaunt grey
shapes stalking through the trees all around her, their eyes
shining. Whenever she looked at them, she remembered the taste of
blood.
The next morning they left the road to cut across the fields.
The wind was gusting, sending dry brown leaves swirling around the
hooves of their horses, but for once it did not rain. When the sun
came out from behind a cloud, it was so bright Arya had to pull her
hood forward to keep it out of her eyes.
She reined up very suddenly. “We are going the wrong
way!”
Gendry groaned. “What is it, moss again?”
“Look at the sun,” she said. “We’re
going south!” Arya rummaged in her saddlebag for the map, so
she could show them. “We should never have left the Trident.
See.” She unrolled the map on her leg. All of them were
looking at her now. “See, there’s Riverrun, between the
rivers.”
“As it happens,” said Jack-Be-Lucky, “we know
where Riverrun is. Every man o’ us.”
“You’re not going to Riverrun,” Lem told her
bluntly. I was almost there, Arya thought. I should have let them take
our horses. I could have walked the rest of the way. She remembered
her dream then, and bit her lip.
“Ah, don’t look so hurt, child,” said Tom
Sevenstrings. “No harm will come to you, you have my word on
that.”
“The word of a liar!”
“No one lied,” said Lem. “We made no promises.
It’s not for us to say what’s to be done with
you.”
Lem was not the leader, though, no more than Tom; that was
Greenbeard, the Tyroshi. Arya turned to face him. “Take me to
Riverrun and you’ll be rewarded,” she said
desperately.
“Little one,” Greenbeard answered, “a peasant
may skin a common squirrel for his pot, but if he finds a gold
squirrel in his tree he takes it to his lord, or he will wish he
did.”
“I’m not a squirrel,” Arya insisted.
“You are.” Greenbeard laughed. “A little gold
squirrel who’s off to see the lightning lord, whether she
wills it or not. He’ll know what’s to be done with you.
I’ll wager he sends you back to your lady mother, just as you
wish.”
Tom Sevenstrings nodded. “Aye, that’s like Lord
Beric. He’ll do right by you, see if he
don’t.” Lord Beric Dondarrion. Arya remembered all she’d heard at
Harrenhal, from the Lannisters and the Bloody Mummers alike. Lord
Beric the wisp o’ the wood. Lord Beric who’d been
killed by Vargo Hoat and before that by Ser Amory Lorch, and twice
by the Mountain That Rides. If he won’t send me home maybe
I’ll kill him too. “Why do I have to see Lord
Beric?” she asked quietly.
“We bring him all our highborn captives,” said
Anguy. Captive. Arya took a breath to still her soul. Calm as still
water. She glanced at the outlaws on their horses, and turned her
horse’s head. Now, quick as a snake, she thought, as she
slammed her heels into the courser’s flank. Right between
Greenbeard and Jack-Be-Lucky she flew, and caught one glimpse of
Gendry’s startled face as his mare moved out of her way. And
then she was in the open field, and running.
North or south, east or west, that made no matter now. She could
find the way to Riverrun later, once she’d lost them. Arya
leaned forward in the saddle and urged the horse to a gallop.
Behind her the outlaws were cursing and shouting at her to come
back. She shut her ears to the calls, but when she glanced back
over her shoulder four of them were coming after her, Anguy and
Harwin and Greenbeard racing side by side with Lem farther back,
his big yellow cloak flapping behind him as he rode. “Swift
as a deer,” she told her mount. “Run, now,
run.”
Arya dashed across brown weedy fields, through waist-high grass
and piles of dry leaves that flurried and flew when her horse
galloped past. There were woods to her left, she saw. I can lose
them there. A dry ditch ran along one side of the field, but she
leapt it without breaking stride, and plunged in among the stand of
elm and yew and birch trees. A quick peek back showed Anguy and
Harwin still hard on her heels. Greenbeard had fallen behind,
though, and she could not see Lem at all. “Faster,” she
told her horse, “you can, you can.”
Between two elms she rode, and never paused to see which side
the moss was growing on. She leapt a rotten log and swung wide
around a monstrous deadfall, jagged with broken branches. Then up a
gentle slope and down the other side, slowing and speeding up
again, her horse’s shoes striking sparks off the flintstones
underfoot. At the top of the hill she glanced back. Harwin had
pushed ahead of Anguy, but both were coming hard. Greenbeard had
fallen further back and seemed to be flagging.
A stream barred her way. She splashed down into it, through
water choked with wet brown leaves. Some clung to her horse’s
legs as they climbed the other side. The undergrowth was thicker
here, the ground so full of roots and rocks that she had to slow,
but she kept as good a pace as she dared. Another hill before her,
this one steeper. Up she went, and down again. How big are these
woods? she wondered. She had the faster horse, she knew that, she
had stolen one of Roose Bolton’s best from the stables at
Harrenhal, but his speed was wasted here. I need to find the fields
again. I need to find a road. Instead she found a game trail. It
was narrow and uneven, but it was something. She raced along it,
branches whipping at her face. One snagged her hood and yanked it
back, and for half a heartbeat she feared they had caught her. A
vixen burst from the brush as she passed, startled by the fury of
her flight. The game trail brought her to another stream. Or was it
the same one? Had she gotten turned around? There was no time to
puzzle it out, she could hear their horses crashing through the
trees behind her. Thorns scratched at her face like the cats she
used to chase in King’s Landing. Sparrows exploded from the
branches of an alder. But the trees were thinning now, and suddenly
she was out of them. Broad level fields stretched before her, all
weeds and wild wheat, sodden and trampled. Arya kicked her horse
back to a gallop. Run, she thought, run for Riverrun, run for home.
Had she lost them? She took one quick look, and there was Harwin
six yards back and gaining. No, she thought, no, he can’t,
not him, it isn’t fair.
Both horses were lathered and flagging by the time he came up
beside her, reached over, and grabbed her bridle. Arya was
breathing hard herself then. She knew the fight was done.
“You ride like a northman, milady,” Harwin said when
he’d drawn them to a halt. “Your aunt was the same.
Lady Lyanna. But my father was master of horse,
remember.”
The look she gave him was full of hurt. “I thought you
were my father’s man.”
“Lord Eddard’s dead, milady. I belong to the
lightning lord now, and to my brothers.”
“What brothers?” Old Hullen had fathered no other
sons that Arya could remember.
“Anguy, Lem, Tom o’ Sevens, Jack and Greenbeard, all
of them. We mean your brother Robb no ill,
milady . . . but it’s not him we fight
for. He has an army all his own, and many a great lord to bend the
knee. The smallfolk have only us.” He gave her a searching
look. “Can you understand what I am telling you?”
“Yes.” That he was not Robb’s man, she
understood well enough. And that she was his captive. I could have
stayed with Hot Pie. We could have taken the little boat and sailed
it up to Riverrun. She had been better off as Squab. No one would
take Squab captive, or Nan, or Weasel, or Arry the orphan boy. I
was a wolf, she thought, but now I’m just some stupid little
lady again.
“Will you ride back peaceful now,” Harwin asked her,
“or must I tie you up and throw you across your
horse?”
“I’ll ride peaceful,” she said sullenly. For
now.
The rains came and went, but there was more grey sky than blue,
and all the streams were running high. On the morning of the third
day, Arya noticed that the moss was growing mostly on the wrong
side of the trees. “We’re going the wrong way,”
she said to Gendry, as they rode past an especially mossy elm.
“We’re going south. See how the moss is growing on the
trunk?”
He pushed thick black hair from eyes and said,
“We’re following the road, that’s all. The road
goes south here.” We’ve been going south all day, she wanted to tell him.
And yesterday too, when we were riding along that streambed. But
she hadn’t been paying close attention yesterday, so she
couldn’t be certain. “I think we’re lost,”
she said in a low voice. “We shouldn’t have left the
river. All we had to do was follow it.”
“The river bends and loops,” said Gendry.
“This is just a shorter way, I bet. Some secret outlaw way.
Lem and Tom and them have been living here for years.”
That was true. Arya bit her lip. “But the
moss . . . ”
“The way it’s raining, we’ll have moss growing
from our ears before long,” Gendry complained.
“Only from our south ear,” Arya declared stubbornly.
There was no use trying to convince the Bull of anything. Still, he
was the only true friend she had, now that Hot Pie had left
them.
“Sharna says she needs me to bake bread,” he’d
told her, the day they rode. “Anyhow I’m tired of rain
and saddlesores and being scared all the time. There’s ale
here, and rabbit to eat, and the bread will be better when I make
it. You’ll see, when you come back. You will come back,
won’t you? When the war’s done?” He remembered
who she was then, and added, “My lady,” reddening.
Arya didn’t know if the war would ever be done, but she
had nodded. “I’m sorry I beat you that time,” she
said. Hot Pie was stupid and craven, but he’d been with her
all the way from King’s Landing and she’d gotten used
to him. “I broke your nose.”
“You broke Lem’s too.” Hot Pie grinned.
“That was good.”
“Lem didn’t think so,” Arya said glumly. Then
it was time to go. When Hot Pie asked if he might kiss
milady’s hand, she punched his shoulder. “Don’t
call me that. You’re Hot Pie, and I’m Arry.”
“I’m not Hot Pie here. Sharna just calls me Boy. The
same as she calls the other boy. It’s going to be
confusing.”
She missed him more than she thought she would, but
Harwin made up for it some. She had told him about his father
Hullen, and how she’d found him dying by the stables in the
Red Keep, the day she fled. “He always said he’d die in
a stable,” Harwin said, “but we all thought some
bad-tempered stallion would be his death, not a pack of
lions.” Arya told of Yoren and their escape from King’s
Landing as well, and much that had happened since, but she left out
the stableboy she’d stabbed with Needle, and the guard whose
throat she’d cut to get out of Harrenhal. Telling Harwin
would be almost like telling her father, and there were some things
that she could not bear having her father know.
Nor did she speak of Jaqen H’ghar and the three deaths he’d
owed and paid. The iron coin he’d given her Arya kept tucked
away beneath her belt, but sometimes at night she would take it out
and remember how his face had melted and changed when he ran his
hand across it. “Valar morghulis,” she would say under
her breath. “Ser Gregor, Dunsen, Polliver, Raff the
Sweetling. The Tickler and the Hound. Ser Ilyn, Ser Meryn, Queen
Cersei, King Joffrey.”
Only six Winterfell men remained of the twenty her father had
sent west with Beric Dondarrion, Harwin told her, and they were
scattered. “It was a trap, milady. Lord Tywin sent his
Mountain across the Red Fork with fire and sword, hoping to draw
your lord father. He planned for Lord Eddard to come west himself
to deal with Gregor Clegane. If he had he would have been killed,
or taken prisoner and traded for the Imp, who was your lady
mother’s captive at the time. Only the Kingslayer never knew
Lord Tywin’s plan, and when he heard about his
brother’s capture he attacked your father in the streets of
King’s Landing.”
“I remember,” said Arya. “He killed
Jory.” Jory had always smiled at her, when he wasn’t
telling her to get from underfoot.
“He killed Jory,” Harwin agreed, “and your
father’s leg was broken when his horse fell on him. So Lord
Eddard couldn’t go west. He sent Lord Beric instead, with
twenty of his own men and twenty from Winterfell, me among them.
There were others besides. Thoros and Ser Raymun Darry and their
men, Ser Gladden Wylde, a lord named Lothar Mallery. But Gregor was
waiting for us at the Mummer’s Ford, with men concealed on
both banks. As we crossed he fell upon us from front and rear.
“I saw the Mountain slay Raymun Darry with a single blow
so terrible that it took Darry’s arm off at the elbow and
killed the horse beneath him too. Gladden Wylde died there with
him, and Lord Mallery was ridden down and drowned. We had lions on
every side, and I thought I was doomed with the rest, but Alyn
shouted commands and restored order to our ranks, and those still a
horse rallied around Thoros and cut our way free. Six score
we’d been that morning. By dark no more than two score were
left, and Lord Beric was gravely wounded. Thoros drew a foot of
lance from his chest that night, and poured boiling wine into the
hole it left.
“Every man of us was certain his lordship would be dead by
daybreak. But Thoros prayed with him all night beside the fire, and
when dawn came, he was still alive, and stronger than he’d
been. It was a fortnight before he could mount a horse, but his
courage kept us strong. He told us that our war had not ended at
the Mummer’s Ford, but only begun there, and that every man
of ours who’d fallen would be avenged tenfold.
“By then the fighting had passed by us. The
Mountain’s men were only the van of Lord Tywin’s host.
They crossed the Red Fork in strength and swept up into the
riverlands, burning everything in their path. We were so few that
all we could do was harry their rear, but we told each other that
we’d join up with King Robert when he marched west to crush
Lord Tywin’s rebellion. Only then we heard that Robert was
dead, and Lord Eddard as well, and Cersei Lannister’s whelp
had ascended the Iron Throne.
“That turned the whole world on its head. We’d been
sent out by the King’s Hand to deal with outlaws, you see,
but now we were the outlaws, and Lord Tywin was the Hand of the
King. There was some wanted to yield then, but Lord Beric
wouldn’t hear of it. We were still king’s men, he said,
and these were the king’s people the lions were savaging. If
we could not fight for Robert, we would fight for them, until every
man of us was dead. And so we did, but as we fought something queer
happened. For every man we lost, two showed up to take his place. A
few were knights or squires, of gentle birth, but most were common
men—fieldhands and fiddlers and innkeeps, servants and shoemakers,
even two septons. Men of all sorts, and women too, children,
dogs . . . ”
“Dogs?” said Arya.
“Aye.” Harwin grinned. “One of our lads keeps
the meanest dogs you’d ever want to see.”
“I wish I had a good mean dog,” said Arya wistfully.
“A lion-killing dog.” She’d had a direwolf once,
Nymeria, but she’d thrown rocks at her until she fled, to
keep the queen from killing her. Could a direwolf kill a lion? she
wondered.
It rained again that afternoon, and long into the evening.
Thankfully the outlaws had secret friends all over, so they did not
need to camp out in the open or seek shelter beneath some leaky
bower, as she and Hot Pie and Gendry had done so often.
That night they sheltered in a burned, abandoned village. At
least it seemed to be abandoned, until Jack-Be-Lucky blew two short
blasts and two long ones on his hunting horn. Then all sorts of
people came crawling out of the ruins and up from secret cellars.
They had ale and dried apples and some stale barley bread, and the
outlaws had a goose that Anguy had brought down on the ride, so
supper that night was almost a feast.
Arya was sucking the last bit of meat off a wing when one of the
villagers turned to Lem Lemoncloak and said, “There were men
through here not two days past, looking for the
Kingslayer.”
Lem snorted. “They’d do better looking in Riverrun.
Down in the deepest dungeons, where it’s nice and
damp.” His nose looked like a squashed apple, red and raw and
swollen, and his mood was foul.
“No,” another villager said. “He’s
escaped.” The Kingslayer. Arya could feel the hair on the back of her neck
prickling. She held her breath to listen.
“Could that be true?” Tom o’ Sevens said.
“I’ll not believe it,” said the one-eyed man
in the rusty pothelm. The other outlaws called him Jack-Be-Lucky,
though losing an eye didn’t seem very lucky to Arya.
“I’ve had me a taste o’ them dungeons. How could
he escape?”
The villagers could only shrug at that. Greenbeard stroked his
thick grey-and-green whiskers and said, “The wolves will
drown in blood if the Kingslayer’s loose again. Thoros must
be told. The Lord of Light will show him Lannister in the
flames.”
“There’s a fine fire burning here,” said
Anguy, smiling.
Greenbeard laughed, and cuffed the archer’s ear. “Do
I look a priest to you, Archer? When Pello of Tyrosh peers into the
fire, the cinders singe his beard.”
Lem cracked his knuckles and said, “Wouldn’t Lord
Beric love to capture Jaime Lannister,
though . . . ”
“Would he hang him, Lem?” one of the village women
asked. “It’d be half a shame to hang a man as pretty as
that one.”
“A trial first!” said Anguy. “Lord Beric
always gives them a trial, you know that.” He smiled.
“Then he hangs them.”
There was laughter all around. Then Tom drew his fingers across
the strings of his woodharp and broke into soft song.
The brothers of the Kingswood,
they were an outlaw band.
The forest was their castle,
but they roamed across the land.
No man’s gold was safe from them,
nor any maiden’s hand.
Oh, the brothers of the Kingswood,
that fearsome outlaw
band . . .
Warm and dry in a corner between Gendry and Harwin, Arya listened
to the singing for a time, then closed her eyes and drifted off to
sleep. She dreamt of home; not Riverrun, but Winterfell. It was not
a good dream, though. She was alone outside the castle, up to her
knees in mud. She could see the grey walls ahead of her, but when
she tried to reach the gates every step seemed harder than the one
before, and the castle faded before her, until it looked more like
smoke than granite. And there were wolves as well, gaunt grey
shapes stalking through the trees all around her, their eyes
shining. Whenever she looked at them, she remembered the taste of
blood.
The next morning they left the road to cut across the fields.
The wind was gusting, sending dry brown leaves swirling around the
hooves of their horses, but for once it did not rain. When the sun
came out from behind a cloud, it was so bright Arya had to pull her
hood forward to keep it out of her eyes.
She reined up very suddenly. “We are going the wrong
way!”
Gendry groaned. “What is it, moss again?”
“Look at the sun,” she said. “We’re
going south!” Arya rummaged in her saddlebag for the map, so
she could show them. “We should never have left the Trident.
See.” She unrolled the map on her leg. All of them were
looking at her now. “See, there’s Riverrun, between the
rivers.”
“As it happens,” said Jack-Be-Lucky, “we know
where Riverrun is. Every man o’ us.”
“You’re not going to Riverrun,” Lem told her
bluntly. I was almost there, Arya thought. I should have let them take
our horses. I could have walked the rest of the way. She remembered
her dream then, and bit her lip.
“Ah, don’t look so hurt, child,” said Tom
Sevenstrings. “No harm will come to you, you have my word on
that.”
“The word of a liar!”
“No one lied,” said Lem. “We made no promises.
It’s not for us to say what’s to be done with
you.”
Lem was not the leader, though, no more than Tom; that was
Greenbeard, the Tyroshi. Arya turned to face him. “Take me to
Riverrun and you’ll be rewarded,” she said
desperately.
“Little one,” Greenbeard answered, “a peasant
may skin a common squirrel for his pot, but if he finds a gold
squirrel in his tree he takes it to his lord, or he will wish he
did.”
“I’m not a squirrel,” Arya insisted.
“You are.” Greenbeard laughed. “A little gold
squirrel who’s off to see the lightning lord, whether she
wills it or not. He’ll know what’s to be done with you.
I’ll wager he sends you back to your lady mother, just as you
wish.”
Tom Sevenstrings nodded. “Aye, that’s like Lord
Beric. He’ll do right by you, see if he
don’t.” Lord Beric Dondarrion. Arya remembered all she’d heard at
Harrenhal, from the Lannisters and the Bloody Mummers alike. Lord
Beric the wisp o’ the wood. Lord Beric who’d been
killed by Vargo Hoat and before that by Ser Amory Lorch, and twice
by the Mountain That Rides. If he won’t send me home maybe
I’ll kill him too. “Why do I have to see Lord
Beric?” she asked quietly.
“We bring him all our highborn captives,” said
Anguy. Captive. Arya took a breath to still her soul. Calm as still
water. She glanced at the outlaws on their horses, and turned her
horse’s head. Now, quick as a snake, she thought, as she
slammed her heels into the courser’s flank. Right between
Greenbeard and Jack-Be-Lucky she flew, and caught one glimpse of
Gendry’s startled face as his mare moved out of her way. And
then she was in the open field, and running.
North or south, east or west, that made no matter now. She could
find the way to Riverrun later, once she’d lost them. Arya
leaned forward in the saddle and urged the horse to a gallop.
Behind her the outlaws were cursing and shouting at her to come
back. She shut her ears to the calls, but when she glanced back
over her shoulder four of them were coming after her, Anguy and
Harwin and Greenbeard racing side by side with Lem farther back,
his big yellow cloak flapping behind him as he rode. “Swift
as a deer,” she told her mount. “Run, now,
run.”
Arya dashed across brown weedy fields, through waist-high grass
and piles of dry leaves that flurried and flew when her horse
galloped past. There were woods to her left, she saw. I can lose
them there. A dry ditch ran along one side of the field, but she
leapt it without breaking stride, and plunged in among the stand of
elm and yew and birch trees. A quick peek back showed Anguy and
Harwin still hard on her heels. Greenbeard had fallen behind,
though, and she could not see Lem at all. “Faster,” she
told her horse, “you can, you can.”
Between two elms she rode, and never paused to see which side
the moss was growing on. She leapt a rotten log and swung wide
around a monstrous deadfall, jagged with broken branches. Then up a
gentle slope and down the other side, slowing and speeding up
again, her horse’s shoes striking sparks off the flintstones
underfoot. At the top of the hill she glanced back. Harwin had
pushed ahead of Anguy, but both were coming hard. Greenbeard had
fallen further back and seemed to be flagging.
A stream barred her way. She splashed down into it, through
water choked with wet brown leaves. Some clung to her horse’s
legs as they climbed the other side. The undergrowth was thicker
here, the ground so full of roots and rocks that she had to slow,
but she kept as good a pace as she dared. Another hill before her,
this one steeper. Up she went, and down again. How big are these
woods? she wondered. She had the faster horse, she knew that, she
had stolen one of Roose Bolton’s best from the stables at
Harrenhal, but his speed was wasted here. I need to find the fields
again. I need to find a road. Instead she found a game trail. It
was narrow and uneven, but it was something. She raced along it,
branches whipping at her face. One snagged her hood and yanked it
back, and for half a heartbeat she feared they had caught her. A
vixen burst from the brush as she passed, startled by the fury of
her flight. The game trail brought her to another stream. Or was it
the same one? Had she gotten turned around? There was no time to
puzzle it out, she could hear their horses crashing through the
trees behind her. Thorns scratched at her face like the cats she
used to chase in King’s Landing. Sparrows exploded from the
branches of an alder. But the trees were thinning now, and suddenly
she was out of them. Broad level fields stretched before her, all
weeds and wild wheat, sodden and trampled. Arya kicked her horse
back to a gallop. Run, she thought, run for Riverrun, run for home.
Had she lost them? She took one quick look, and there was Harwin
six yards back and gaining. No, she thought, no, he can’t,
not him, it isn’t fair.
Both horses were lathered and flagging by the time he came up
beside her, reached over, and grabbed her bridle. Arya was
breathing hard herself then. She knew the fight was done.
“You ride like a northman, milady,” Harwin said when
he’d drawn them to a halt. “Your aunt was the same.
Lady Lyanna. But my father was master of horse,
remember.”
The look she gave him was full of hurt. “I thought you
were my father’s man.”
“Lord Eddard’s dead, milady. I belong to the
lightning lord now, and to my brothers.”
“What brothers?” Old Hullen had fathered no other
sons that Arya could remember.
“Anguy, Lem, Tom o’ Sevens, Jack and Greenbeard, all
of them. We mean your brother Robb no ill,
milady . . . but it’s not him we fight
for. He has an army all his own, and many a great lord to bend the
knee. The smallfolk have only us.” He gave her a searching
look. “Can you understand what I am telling you?”
“Yes.” That he was not Robb’s man, she
understood well enough. And that she was his captive. I could have
stayed with Hot Pie. We could have taken the little boat and sailed
it up to Riverrun. She had been better off as Squab. No one would
take Squab captive, or Nan, or Weasel, or Arry the orphan boy. I
was a wolf, she thought, but now I’m just some stupid little
lady again.
“Will you ride back peaceful now,” Harwin asked her,
“or must I tie you up and throw you across your
horse?”
“I’ll ride peaceful,” she said sullenly. For
now.