Sobbing, Sam took another step. This is the last one, the very
last, I can’t go on, I can’t. But his feet moved again.
One and then the other. They took a step, and then another, and he
thought, They’re not my feet, they’re someone
else’s, someone else is walking, it can’t be me.
When he looked down he could see them stumbling through the
snow; shapeless things, and clumsy. His boots had been black, he
seemed to remember, but the snow had caked around them, and now
they were misshapen white balls. Like two clubfeet made of ice.
It
would not stop, the snow. The drifts were up past his knees, and a
crust covered his lower legs like a pair of white greaves. His
steps were dragging, lurching. The heavy pack he carried made him
look like some monstrous hunchback. And he was tired, so tired. I
can’t go on. Mother have mercy, I can’t.
Every fourth or fifth step he had to reach down and tug up his
swordbelt. He had lost the sword on the Fist, but the scabbard
still weighed down the belt. He did have two knives; the
dragonglass dagger Jon had given him and the steel one he cut his
meat with. All that weight dragged heavy, and his belly was so big
and round that if he forgot to tug the belt slipped right off and
tangled round his ankles, no matter how tight he cinched it. He had
tried belting it above his belly once, but then it came almost to
his armpits. Grenn had laughed himself sick at the sight of it, and
Dolorous Edd had said, “I knew a man once who wore his sword
on a chain around his neck like that. One day he stumbled, and the
hilt went up his nose.”
Sam was stumbling himself. There were rocks beneath the snow,
and the roots of trees, and sometimes deep holes in the frozen
ground. Black Bernarr had stepped in one and broken his ankle three
days past, or maybe four, or . . . he did not
know how long it had been, truly. The Lord Commander had put
Bernarr on a horse after that.
Sobbing, Sam took another step. It felt more like he was falling
down than walking, falling endlessly but never hitting the ground,
just falling forward and forward. I have to stop, it hurts too
much. I’m so cold and tired, I need to sleep, just a little
sleep beside a fire, and a bite to eat that isn’t frozen.
But if he stopped he died. He knew that. They all knew that, the
few who were left. They had been fifty when they fled the Fist,
maybe more, but some had wandered off in the snow, a few wounded
had bled to death . . . and sometimes Sam heard
shouts behind him, from the rear guard, and once an awful scream.
When he heard that he had run, twenty yards or thirty, as fast and
as far as he could, his half-frozen feet kicking up the snow, He
would be running still if his legs were stronger. They are behind
us, they are still behind us, they are taking us one by one.
Sobbing, Sam took another step. He had been cold so long he was
forgetting what it was like to feel warm. He wore three pairs of
hose, two layers of smallclothes beneath a double lambswool tunic,
and over that a thick quilted coat that padded him against the cold
steel of his chainmail. Over the hauberk he had a loose surcoat,
over that a triple-thick cloak with a bone button that fastened
tight under his chins. Its hood flopped forward over his forehead.
Heavy fur mitts covered his hands over thin wool-and-leather
gloves, a scarf was wrapped snugly about the lower half of his
face, and he had a tight-fitting fleece-lined cap to pull down over
his ears beneath the hood. And still the cold was in him. His feet
especially. He couldn’t even feel them now, but only
yesterday they had hurt so bad he could hardly bear to stand on
them, let alone walk. Every step made him want to scream. Was that
yesterday? He could not remember. He had not slept since the Fist,
not once since the horn had blown. Unless it was while he was
walking. Could a man walk while he was sleeping? Sam did not know,
or else he had forgotten.
Sobbing, he took another step. The snow swirled down around him.
Sometimes it fell from a white sky, and sometimes from a black, but
that was all that remained of day and night. He wore it on his
shoulders like a second cloak, and it piled up high atop the pack
he carried and made it even heavier and harder to bear. The small
of his back hurt abominably, as if someone had shoved a knife in
there and was wiggling it back and forth with every step. His
shoulders were in agony from the weight of the mail. He would have
given most anything to take it off, but he was afraid to. Anyway he
would have needed to remove his cloak and surcoat to get at it, and
then the cold would have him. If only I was stronger . . . he
wasn’t, though, and it was no good wishing. Sam was weak, and
fat, so very fat, he could hardly bear his own weight, the mail was
much too much for him. It felt as though it was rubbing his
shoulders raw, despite the layers of cloth and quilt between the
steel and skin. The only thing he could do was cry, and when he
cried the tears froze on his cheeks.
Sobbing, he took another step. The crust was broken where he set
his feet, otherwise he did not think he could have moved at all.
Off to the left and right, half-seen through the silent trees,
torches turned to vague orange haloes in the falling snow. When he
turned his head he could see them, slipping silent through the
wood, bobbing up and down and back and forth. The Old Bear’s
ring of fire, he reminded himself, and woe to him who leaves it. As
he walked, it seemed as if he were chasing the torches ahead of
him, but they had legs as well, longer and stronger than his, so he
could never catch them.
Yesterday he begged for them to let him be one of the
torchbearers, even if it meant walking outside of the column with
the darkness pressing close. He wanted the fire, dreamed of the
fire. If I had the fire, I would not be cold. But someone reminded
him that he’d had a torch at the start, but he’d
dropped it in the snow and snuffed the fire out. Sam didn’t
remember dropping any torch, but he supposed it was true. He was
too weak to hold his arm up for long. Was it Edd who reminded him
about the torch, or Grenn? He couldn’t remember that either.
Fat and weak and useless, even my wits are freezing now. He took
another step.
He had wrapped his scarf over his nose and mouth, but it was
covered with snot now, and so stiff he feared it must be frozen to
his face. Even breathing was hard, and the air was so cold it hurt
to swallow it. “Mother have mercy,” he muttered in a
hushed husky voice beneath the frozen mask. “Mother have
mercy, Mother have mercy, Mother have mercy.” With each
prayer he took another step, dragging his legs through the snow.
“Mother have mercy, Mother have mercy, Mother have
mercy.”
His own mother was a thousand leagues south, safe with his
sisters and his little brother Dickon in the keep at Horn Hill. She
can’t hear me, no more than the Mother Above. The Mother was
merciful, all the septons agreed, but the Seven had no power beyond
the Wall. This was where the old gods ruled, the nameless gods of
the trees and the wolves and the snows. “Mercy,” he
whispered then, to whatever might be listening, old gods or new, or
demons too, “oh, mercy, mercy me, mercy me.” Maslyn screamed for mercy. Why had he suddenly remembered that?
It was nothing he wanted to remember. The man had stumbled
backward, dropping his sword, pleading, yielding, even yanking off
his thick black glove and thrusting it up before him as if it were
a gauntlet. He was still shrieking for quarter as the wight lifted
him in the air by the throat and near ripped the head off him. The
dead have no mercy left in them, and the
Others . . . no, I mustn’t think of that,
don’t think, don’t remember, just walk, just walk, just
walk.
Sobbing, he took another step.
A root beneath the crust caught his toe, and Sam tripped and
fell heavily to one knee, so hard he bit his tongue. He could taste
the blood in his mouth, warmer than anything he had tasted since
the Fist. This is the end, he thought. Now that he had fallen he
could not seem to find the strength to rise again. He groped for a
tree branch and clutched it tight, trying to pull himself back to
his feet, but his stiff legs would not support him. The mail was
too heavy, and he was too fat besides, and too weak, and too
tired.
“Back on your feet, Piggy,” someone growled as he
went past, but Sam paid him no mind. I’ll just lie down in
the snow and close my eyes. It wouldn’t be so bad, dying
here. He couldn’t possibly be any colder, and after a little
while he wouldn’t be able to feel the ache in his lower back
or the terrible pain in his shoulders, no more than he could feel
his feet. I won’t be the first to die, they can’t say I
was. Hundreds had died on the Fist, they had died all around him,
and more had died after, he’d seen them. Shivering, Sam
released his grip on the tree and eased himself down in the snow.
It was cold and wet, he knew, but he could scarcely feel it through
all his clothing. He stared upward at the pale white sky as
snowflakes drifted down upon his stomach and his chest and his
eyelids. The snow will cover me like a thick white blanket. It will
be warm under the snow, and if they speak of me they’ll have
to say I died a man of the Night’s Watch. I did. I did. I did
my duty. No one can say I forswore myself. I’m fat and
I’m weak and I’m craven, but I did my duty.
The ravens had been his responsibility. That was why they had
brought him along. He hadn’t wanted to go, he’d told
them so, he’d told them all what a big coward he was. But
Maester Aemon was very old and blind besides, so they had to send
Sam to tend to the ravens. The Lord Commander had given him his
orders when they made their camp on the Fist. “You’re
no fighter. We both know that, boy. If it happens that we’re
attacked, don’t go trying to prove otherwise, you’ll
just get in the way. You’re to send a message. And
don’t come running to ask what the letter should say. Write
it out yourself, and send one bird to Castle Black and another to
the Shadow Tower.” The Old Bear pointed a gloved finger right
in Sam’s face. “I don’t care if you’re so
scared you foul your breeches, and I don’t care if a thousand
wildlings are coming over the walls howling for your blood, you get
those birds off, or I swear I’ll hunt you through all seven
hells and make you damn sorry that you didn’t.” And
Mormont’s own raven had bobbed its head up and down and
croaked, “Sorry, sorry, sorry.”
Sam was sorry; sorry he hadn’t been braver, or stronger,
or good with swords, that he hadn’t been a better son to his
father and a better brother to Dickon and the girls. He was sorry
to die too, but better men had died on the Fist, good men and true,
not squeaking fat boys like him. At least he would not have the Old
Bear hunting him through hell, though. I got the birds off. I did
that right, at least. He had written out the messages ahead of
time, short messages and simple, telling of an attack on the Fist
of the First Men, and then he had tucked them away safe in his
parchment pouch, hoping he would never need to send them.
When the horns blew Sam had been sleeping. He thought he was
dreaming them at first, but when he opened his eyes snow was
falling on the camp and the black brothers were all grabbing bows
and spears and running toward the ringwall. Chett was the only one
nearby, Maester Aemon’s old steward with the face full of
boils and the big wen on his neck. Sam had never seen so much fear
on a man’s face as he saw on Chett’s when that third
blast came moaning through the trees. “Help me get the birds
off,” he pleaded, but the other steward had turned and run
off, dagger in hand. He has the dogs to care for, Sam remembered.
Probably the Lord Commander had given him some orders as well.
His fingers had been so stiff and clumsy in the gloves, and he
was shaking from fear and cold, but he found the parchment pouch
and dug out the messages he’d written. The ravens were
shrieking furiously, and when he opened the Castle Black cage one
of them flew right in his face. Two more escaped before Sam could
catch one, and when he did it pecked him through his glove, drawing
blood. Yet somehow he held on long enough to attach the little roll
of parchment. The warhorn had fallen silent by then, but the Fist
rang with shouted commands and the clatter of steel.
“Fly!” Sam called as he tossed the raven into the
air.
The birds in the Shadow Tower cage were screaming and fluttering
about so madly that he was afraid to open the door, but he made
himself do it anyway. This time he caught the first raven that
tried to escape. A moment later, it was clawing its way up through
the falling snow, bearing word of the attack.
His duty done, he finished dressing with clumsy, frightened
fingers, donning his cap and surcoat and hooded cloak and buckling
on his swordbelt, buckling it real tight so it wouldn’t fall
down. Then he found his pack and stuffed all his things inside,
spare smallclothes and dry socks, the dragonglass arrowheads and
spearhead Jon had given him and the old horn too, his parchments,
inks, and quills, the maps he’d been drawing, and a rock-hard
garlic sausage he’d been saving since the Wall. He tied it
all up and shouldered the pack onto his back. The Lord Commander
said I wasn’t to rush to the ringwall, he recalled, but he
said I shouldn’t come running to him either. Sam took a deep
breath and realized that he did not know what to do next.
He remembered turning in a circle, lost, the fear growing inside
him as it always did. There were dogs barking and horses
trumpeting, but the snow muffled the sounds and made them seem far
away. Sam could see nothing beyond three yards, not even the
torches burning along the low stone wall that ringed the crown of
the hill. Could the torches have gone out? That was too scary to
think about. The horn blew thrice long, three long blasts means
Others. The white walkers of the wood, the cold shadows, the
monsters of the tales that made him squeak and tremble as a boy,
riding their giant ice-spiders, hungry for
blood . . .
Awkwardly he drew his sword, and plodded heavily through the
snow holding it. A dog ran past barking, and he saw some of the men
from the Shadow Tower, big bearded men with longaxes and eight-foot
spears. He felt safer for their company, so he followed them to the
wall. When he saw the torches still burning atop the ring of stones
a shudder of relief went through him.
The black brothers stood with swords and spears in hand,
watching the snow fall, waiting. Ser Mallador Locke went by on his
horse, wearing a snow-speckled helm. Sam stood well back behind the
others, looking for Grenn or Dolorous Edd. If I have to die, let me
die beside my friends, he remembered thinking. But all the men
around him were strangers, Shadow Tower men under the command of
the ranger named Blane.
“Here they come,” he heard a brother say.
“Notch,” said Blane, and twenty black arrows were
pulled from as many quivers, and notched to as many bowstrings.
“Gods be good, there’s hundreds,” a voice said
softly.
“Draw,” Blane said, and then, “hold.”
Sam could not see and did not want to see. The men of the
Night’s Watch stood behind their torches, waiting with arrows
pulled back to their ears, as something came up that dark, slippery
slope through the snow. “Hold,” Blane said again,
“hold, hold.” And then, “Loose.”
The arrows whispered as they flew.
A ragged cheer went up from the men along the ringwall, but it
died quickly. “They’re not stopping,
m’lord,” a man said to Blane, and another shouted,
“More! Look there, coming from the trees,” and yet
another said, “Gods ha’ mercy, they’s crawling.
They’s almost here, they’s on us!” Sam had been
backing away by then, shaking like the last leaf on the tree when
the wind kicks up, as much from cold as from fear. It had been very
cold that night. Even colder than now. The snow feels almost warm. I
feel better now. A little rest was all I needed. Maybe in a little
while I’ll be strong enough to walk again. In a little
while.
A horse stepped past his head, a shaggy grey beast with snow in
its mane and hooves crusted with ice. Sam watched it come and
watched it go. Another appeared from out of the falling snow, with
a man in black leading it. When he saw Sam in his path he cursed
him and led the horse around. I wish I had a horse, he thought. If
I had a horse I could keep going. I could sit, and even sleep some
in the saddle. Most of their mounts had been lost at the Fist,
though, and those that remained carried their food, their torches,
and their wounded. Sam wasn’t wounded. Only fat and weak, and
the greatest craven in the Seven Kingdoms.
He was such a coward. Lord Randyll, his father, had always said
so, and he had been right. Sam was his heir, but he had never been
worthy, so his father had sent him away to the Wall. His little
brother Dickon would inherit the Tarly lands and castle, and the
greatsword Heartsbane that the lords of Horn Hill had borne so
proudly for centuries. He wondered whether Dickon would shed a tear
for his brother who died in the snow, somewhere off beyond the edge
of the world. Why should he? A coward’s not worth weeping
over. He had heard his father tell his mother as much, half a
hundred times. The Old Bear knew it too.
“Fire arrows,” the Lord Commander roared that night
on the Fist, when he appeared suddenly astride his horse,
“give them flame.” It was then he noticed Sam there
quaking. “Tarly! Get out of here! Your place is with the
ravens.”
“I . . . I . . . I
got the messages away.”
“Good.” On Mormont’s shoulder his own raven
echoed, “Good, good.”
The Lord Commander looked huge in fur and mail. Behind his black
iron visor, his eyes were fierce. “You’re in the way
here. Go back to your cages. If I need to send another message, I
don’t want to have to find you first. See that the birds are
ready.” He did not wait for a response, but turned his horse
and trotted around the ring, shouting, “Fire! Give them
fire!”
Sam did not need to be told twice. He went back to the birds, as
fast as his fat legs could carry him. I should write the message
ahead of time, he thought, so we can get the birds away as fast as
need be. It took him longer than it should have to light his little
fire, to warm the frozen ink. He sat beside it on a rock with quill
and parchment, and wrote his messages. Attacked amidst snow and cold, but we’ve thrown them back
with fire arrows, he wrote, as he heard Thoren Smallwood’s
voice ring out with a command of, “Notch,
draw . . . loose.” The flight of arrows
made a sound as sweet as a mother’s prayer. “Burn, you
dead bastards, burn,” Dywen sang out, cackling. The brothers
cheered and cursed. All safe, he wrote. We remain on the Fist of
the First Men. Sam hoped they were better archers than him.
He put that note aside and found another blank parchment. Still
fighting on the Fist, amidst heavy snow, he wrote when someone
shouted, “They’re still coming.” Result
uncertain. “Spears,” someone said. It might have been
Ser Mallador, but Sam could not swear to it. Wights attacked us on
the Fist, in snow, he wrote, but we drove them off with fire. He
turned his head. Through the drifting snow, all he could see was
the huge fire at the center of the camp, with mounted men moving
restlessly around it. The reserve, he knew, ready to ride down
anything that breached the ringwall. They had armed themselves with
torches in place of swords, and were lighting them in the
flames. Wights all around us, he wrote, when he heard the shouts from
the north face. Coming up from north and south at once. Spears and
swords don’t stop them, only fire. “Loose, loose,
loose,” a voice screamed in the night, and another shouted,
“Bloody huge,” and a third voice said, “A
giant!” and a fourth insisted, “A bear, a bear!”
A horse shrieked and the hounds began to bay, and there was so much
shouting that Sam couldn’t make out the voices anymore. He
wrote faster, note after note. Dead wildlings, and a giant, or
maybe a bear, on us, all around. He heard the crash of steel on
wood, which could only mean one thing. Wights over the ringwall.
Fighting inside the camp. A dozen mounted brothers pounded past him
toward the east wall, burning brands streaming flames in each
rider’s hand. Lord Commander Mormont is meeting them with
fire. We’ve won. We’re winning. We’re holding our
own. We’re cutting our way free and retreating for the Wall.
We’re trapped on the Fist, hard pressed.
One of the Shadow Tower men came staggering out of the darkness
to fall at Sam’s feet. He crawled within a foot of the fire
before he died. Lost, Sam wrote, the battle’s lost.
We’re all lost.
Why must he remember the fight at the Fist? He didn’t want
to remember. Not that. He tried to make himself remember his
mother, or his little sister Talla, or that girl Gilly at
Craster’s Keep. Someone was shaking him by the shoulder.
“Get up,” a voice said. “Sam, you can’t go
to sleep here. Get up and keep walking.” I wasn’t asleep, I was remembering. “Go away,”
he said, his words frosting in the cold air. “I’m well.
I want to rest.”
“Get up.” Grenn’s voice, harsh and husky. He
loomed over Sam, his blacks crusty with snow. “There’s
no resting, the Old Bear said. You’ll die.”
“Grenn.” He smiled. “No, truly, I’m good
here. You just go on. I’ll catch you after I’ve rested
a bit longer.”
“You won’t.” Grenn’s thick brown beard
was frozen all around his mouth. It made him look like some old
man. “You’ll freeze, or the Others will get you. Sam,
get up!”
The night before they left the Wall, Pyp had teased Grenn the
way he did, Sam remembered, smiling and saying how Grenn was a good
choice for the ranging, since he was too stupid to be terrified.
Grenn hotly denied it until he realized what he was saying. He was
stocky and thick-necked and strong—Ser Alliser Thorne had called
him “Aurochs,” the same way he called Sam “Ser
Piggy” and Jon “Lord Snow”—but he had always
treated Sam nice enough. That was only because of Jon, though. If
it weren’t for Jon, none of them would have liked me. And now
Jon was gone, lost in the Skirling Pass with Qhorin Halfhand, most
likely dead. Sam would have cried for him, but those tears would
only freeze as well, and he could scarcely keep his eyes open
now.
A tall brother with a torch stopped beside them, and for a
wonderful moment Sam felt the warmth on his face. “Leave
him,” the man said to Grenn. “If they can’t walk,
they’re done. Save your strength for yourself,
Grenn.”
“He’ll get up,” Grenn replied. “He only
needs a hand.”
The man moved on, taking the blessed warmth with him. Grenn
tried to pull Sam to his feet. “That hurts,” he
complained. “Stop it. Grenn, you’re hurting my arm.
Stop it.”
“You’re too bloody heavy.” Grenn jammed his
hands into Sam’s armpits, gave a grunt, and hauled him
upright. But the moment he let go, the fat boy sat back down in the
snow. Grenn kicked him, a solid thump that cracked the crust of
snow around his boot and sent it flying everywhere. “Get
up!” He kicked him again. “Get up and walk. You have to
walk.”
Sam fell over sideways, curling up into a tight ball to protect
himself from the kicks. He hardly felt them through all his wool
and leather and mail, but even so, they hurt. I thought Grenn was
my friend. You shouldn’t kick your friends. Why won’t
they let me be? I just need to rest, that’s all, to rest and
sleep some, and maybe die a little.
“If you take the torch, I can take the fat boy.”
Suddenly he was jerked up into the cold air, away from his sweet
soft snow; he was floating. There was an arm under his knees, and
another one under his back. Sam raised his head and blinked. A face
loomed close, a broad brutal face with a flat nose and small dark
eyes and a thicket of coarse brown beard. He had seen the face
before, but it took him a moment to remember. Paul. Small Paul.
Melting ice ran down into his eyes from the heat of the torch.
“Can you carry him?” he heard Grenn ask.
“I carried a calf once was heavier than him. I carried him
down to his mother so he could get a drink of milk.”
Sam’s head bobbed up and down with every step that Small
Paul took. “Stop it,” he muttered, “put me down,
I’m not a baby. I’m a man of the Night’s
Watch.” He sobbed. “Just let me die.”
“Be quiet, Sam,” said Grenn. “Save your
strength. Think about your sisters and brother. Maester Aemon. Your
favorite foods. Sing a song if you like.”
“Aloud?”
“In your head.”
Sam knew a hundred songs, but when he tried to think of one he
couldn’t. The words had all gone from his head. He sobbed
again and said, “I don’t know any songs, Grenn. I did
know some, but now I don’t.”
“Yes you do,” said Grenn. “How about
‘The Bear and the Maiden Fair’ everybody knows that
one. A bear there was, a bear, a bear! All black and brown and
covered with hair!”
“No, not that one,” Sam pleaded. The bear that had
come up the Fist had no hair left on its rotted flesh. He
didn’t want to think about bears. “No songs. Please,
Grenn.”
“Think about your ravens, then.”
“They were never mine.” They were the Lord
Commander’s ravens, the ravens of the Night’s Watch.
“They belonged to Castle Black and the Shadow
Tower.”
Small Paul frowned. “Chett said I could have the Old
Bear’s raven, the one that talks. I saved food for it and
everything.” He shook his head. “I forgot, though. I
left the food where I hid it.” He plodded onward, pale white
breath coming from his mouth with every step, then suddenly said,
“Could I have one of your ravens? Just the one. I’d
never let Lark eat it.”
“They’re gone,” said Sam. “I’m
sorry.” So sorry. “They’re flying back to the
Wall now.” He had set the birds free when he’d heard
the warhorns sound once more, calling the Watch to horse. Two short
blasts and a long one, that was the call to mount up. But there was
no reason to mount, unless to abandon the Fist, and that meant the
battle was lost. The fear bit him so strong then that it was all
Sam could do to open the cages. Only as he watched the last raven
flap up into the snowstorm did he realize that he had forgotten to
send any of the messages he’d written.
“No,” he’d squealed, “oh, no, oh,
no.” The snow fell and the horns blew; ahooo ahooo
ahooooooooooooooooooo, they cried, to horse, to horse, to horse.
Sam saw two ravens perched on a rock and ran after them, but the
birds flapped off lazily through the swirling snow, in opposite
directions. He chased one, his breath puffing out his nose in thick
white clouds, stumbled, and found himself ten feet from the
ringwall.
After that . . . he remembered the dead
coming over the stones with arrows in their faces and through their
throats. Some were all in ringmail and some were almost
naked . . . wildlings, most of them, but a few
wore faded blacks. He remembered one of the Shadow Tower men
shoving his spear through a wight’s pale soft belly and out
his back, and how the thing staggered right up the shaft and
reached out his black hands and twisted the brother’s head
around until blood came out his mouth. That was when his bladder
let go the first time, he was almost sure.
He did not remember running, but he must have, because the next
he knew he was near the fire half a camp away, with old Ser Ottyn
Wythers and some archers. Ser Ottyn was on his knees in the snow,
staring at the chaos around them, until a riderless horse came by
and kicked him in the face. The archers paid him no mind. They were
loosing fire arrows at shadows in the dark. Sam saw one wight hit,
saw the flames engulf it, but there were a dozen more behind it,
and a huge pale shape that must have been the bear, and soon enough
the bowmen had no arrows.
And then Sam found himself on a horse. It wasn’t his own
horse, and he never recalled mounting up either. Maybe it was the
horse that had smashed Ser Ottyn’s face in. The horns were
still blowing, so he kicked the horse and turned him toward the
sound.
In the midst of carnage and chaos and blowing snow, he found
Dolorous Edd sitting on his garron with a plain black banner on a
spear. “Sam,” Edd said when he saw him, “would
you wake me, please? I am having this terrible
nightmare.”
More men were mounting up every moment. The warhorns called them
back. Ahooo ahooo ahooooooooooooooooooo. “They’re over
the west wall, m’lord,” Thoren Smallwood screamed at
the Old Bear, as he fought to control his horse. “I’ll
send reserves . . . ”
“NO!” Mormont had to bellow at the top of his lungs
to be heard over the horns. “Call them back, we have to cut
our way out.” He stood in his stirrups, his black cloak
snapping in the wind, the fire shining off his armor.
“Spearhead!” he roared. “Form wedge, we ride.
Down the south face, then east!”
“My lord, the south slope’s crawling with
them!”
“The others are too steep,” Mormont said. “We
have—”
His garron screamed and reared and almost threw him as the bear
came staggering through the snow. Sam pissed himself all over
again. I didn’t think I had any more left inside me. The bear
was dead, pale and rotting, its fur and skin all sloughed off and
half its right arm burned to bone, yet still it came on. Only its
eyes lived. Bright blue, just as Jon said. They shone like frozen
stars. Thoren Smallwood charged, his longsword shining all orange
and red from the light of the fire. His swing near took the
bear’s head off. And then the bear took his.
“RIDE!” the Lord Commander shouted, wheeling.
They were at the gallop by the time they reached the ring. Sam
had always been too frightened to jump a horse before, but when the
low stone wall loomed up before him he knew he had no choice. He
kicked and closed his eyes and whimpered, and the garron took him
over, somehow, somehow, the garron took him over. The rider to his
right came crashing down in a tangle of steel and leather and
screaming horseflesh, and then the wights were swarming over him
and the wedge was closing up. They plunged down the hillside at a
run, through clutching black hands and burning blue eyes and
blowing snow. Horses stumbled and rolled, men were swept from their
saddles, torches spun through the air, axes and swords hacked at
dead flesh, and Samwell Tarly sobbed, clutching desperately to his
horse with a strength he never knew he had.
He was in the middle of the flying spearhead with brothers on
either side, and before and behind him as well. A dog ran with them
for a ways, bounding down the snowy slope and in and out among the
horses, but it could not keep up. The wights stood their ground and
were ridden down and trampled underhoof. Even as they fell they
clutched at swords and stirrups and the legs of passing horses. Sam
saw one claw open a garron’s belly with its right hand while
it clung to the saddle with its left.
Suddenly the trees were all about them, and Sam was splashing
through a frozen stream with the sounds of slaughter dwindling
behind. He turned, breathless with
relief . . . until a man in black leapt from
the brush and yanked him out of the saddle. Who he was, Sam never
saw; he was up in an instant, and galloping away the next. When he
tried to run after the horse, his feet tangled in a root and he
fell hard on his face and lay weeping like a baby until Dolorous
Edd found him there.
That was his last coherent memory of the Fist of the First Men.
Later, hours later, he stood shivering among the other survivors,
half mounted and half afoot. They were miles from the Fist by then,
though Sam did not remember how. Dywen had led down five
packhorses, heavy laden with food and oil and torches, and three
had made it this far. The Old Bear made them redistribute the
loads, so the loss of any one horse and its provisions would not be
such a catastrophe. He took garrons from the healthy men and gave
them to the wounded, organized the walkers, and set torches to
guard their flanks and rear. All I need do is walk, Sam told
himself, as he took that first step toward home. But before an hour
was gone he had begun to struggle, and to
lag . . .
They were lagging now as well, he saw. He remembered Pyp saying
once how Small Paul was the strongest man in the Watch. He must be,
to carry me. Yet even so, the snow was growing deeper, the ground
more treacherous, and Paul’s strides had begun to shorten.
More horsemen passed, wounded men who looked at Sam with dull
incurious eyes. Some torch bearers went by as well.
“You’re falling behind,” one told them. The next
agreed. “No one’s like to wait for you, Paul. Leave the
pig for the dead men.”
“He promised I could have a bird,” Small Paul said,
even though Sam hadn’t, not truly. They aren’t mine to
give. “I want me a bird that talks, and eats corn from my
hand.”
“Bloody fool,” the torch man said. Then he was
gone.
It was a while after when Grenn stopped suddenly.
“We’re alone,” he said in a hoarse voice.
“I can’t see the other torches. Was that the rear
guard?”
Small Paul had no answer for him. The big man gave a grunt and
sank to his knees. His arms trembled as he lay Sam gently in the
snow. “I can’t carry you no more. I would, but I
can’t.” He shivered violently.
The wind sighed through the trees, driving a fine spray of snow
into their faces. The cold was so bitter that Sam felt naked. He
looked for the other torches, but they were gone, every one of
them. There was only the one Grenn carried, the flames rising from
it like pale orange silks. He could see through them, to the black
beyond. That torch will burn out soon, he thought, and we are all
alone, without food or friends or fire.
But that was wrong. They weren’t alone at all.
The lower branches of the great green sentinel shed their burden
of snow with a soft wet plop. Grenn spun, thrusting out his torch.
“Who goes there?” A horse’s head emerged from the
darkness. Sam felt a moment’s relief, until he saw the horse.
Hoarfrost covered it like a sheen of frozen sweat, and a nest of
stiff black entrails dragged from its open belly. On its back was a
rider pale as ice. Sam made a whimpery sound deep in his throat. He
was so scared he might have pissed himself all over again, but the
cold was in him, a cold so savage that his bladder felt frozen
solid. The Other slid gracefully from the saddle to stand upon the
snow. Sword-slim it was, and milky white. Its armor rippled and
shifted as it moved, and its feet did not break the crust of the
new-fallen snow.
Small Paul unslung the long-hafted axe strapped across his back.
“Why’d you hurt that horse? That was Mawney’s
horse.”
Sam groped for the hilt of his sword, but the scabbard was
empty. He had lost it on the Fist, he remembered too late.
“Get away!” Grenn took a step, thrusting the torch
out before him. “Away, or you burn.” He poked at it with
the flames.
The Other’s sword gleamed with a faint blue glow. It moved
toward Grenn, lightning quick, slashing. When the ice blue blade
brushed the flames, a screech stabbed Sam’s ears sharp as a
needle. The head of the torch tumbled sideways to vanish beneath a
deep drift of snow, the fire snuffed out at once. And all Grenn
held was a short wooden stick. He flung it at the Other, cursing,
as Small Paul charged in with his axe.
The fear that filled Sam then was worse than any fear he had
ever felt before, and Samwell Tarly knew every kind of fear.
“Mother have mercy,” he wept, forgetting the old gods
in his terror. “Father protect me, oh
oh . . . ” His fingers found his dagger
and he filled his hand with that.
The wights had been slow clumsy things, but the Other was light
as snow on the wind. It slid away from Paul’s axe, armor
rippling, and its crystal sword twisted and spun and slipped
between the iron rings of Paul’s mail, through leather and wool and bone and flesh.
It came out his back with a hissssssssssss and Sam heard Paul say,
“Oh,” as he lost the axe. Impaled, his blood smoking
around the sword, the big man tried to reach his killer with his
hands and almost had before he fell. The weight of him tore the
strange pale sword from the Other’s grip. Do it now. Stop crying and fight, you baby. Fight, craven. It was
his father he heard, it was Alliser Thorne, it was his brother
Dickon and the boy Rast. Craven, craven, craven. He giggled
hysterically, wondering if they would make a wight of him, a huge
fat white wight always tripping over its own dead feet. Do it, Sam.
Was that Jon, now? Jon was dead. You can do it, you can, just do
it. And then he was stumbling forward, falling more than running,
really, closing his eyes and shoving the dagger blindly out before
him with both hands. He heard a crack, like the sound ice makes
when it breaks beneath a man’s foot, and then a screech so
shrill and sharp that he went staggering backward with his hands
over his muffled ears, and fell hard on his arse.
When he opened his eyes the Other’s armor was running down
its legs in rivulets as pale blue blood hissed and steamed around
the black dragonglass dagger in its throat. It reached down with
two bone-white hands to pull out the knife, but where its fingers
touched the obsidian they smoked.
Sam rolled onto his side, eyes wide as the Other shrank and
puddled, dissolving away. In twenty heartbeats its flesh was gone,
swirling away in a fine white mist. Beneath were bones like
milkglass, pale and shiny, and they were melting too. Finally only
the dragonglass dagger remained, wreathed in steam as if it were
alive and sweating. Grenn bent to scoop it up and flung it down
again at once. “Mother, that’s cold.”
“Obsidian.” Sam struggled to his knees.
“Dragonglass, they call it. Dragonglass. Dragon glass.”
He giggled, and cried, and doubled over to heave his courage out
onto the snow.
Grenn pulled Sam to his feet, checked Small Paul for a pulse and
closed his eyes, then snatched up the dagger again. This time he
was able to hold it.
“You keep it,” Sam said. “You’re not
craven like me.”
“So craven you killed an Other.” Grenn pointed with
the knife. “Look there, through the trees. Pink light. Dawn,
Sam. Dawn. That must be east. If we head that way, we should catch
Mormont.”
“If you say.” Sam kicked his left foot against a
tree, to knock off all the snow. Then the right. “I’ll
try.” Grimacing, he took a step. “I’ll try
hard.” And then another.
Sobbing, Sam took another step. This is the last one, the very
last, I can’t go on, I can’t. But his feet moved again.
One and then the other. They took a step, and then another, and he
thought, They’re not my feet, they’re someone
else’s, someone else is walking, it can’t be me.
When he looked down he could see them stumbling through the
snow; shapeless things, and clumsy. His boots had been black, he
seemed to remember, but the snow had caked around them, and now
they were misshapen white balls. Like two clubfeet made of ice.
It
would not stop, the snow. The drifts were up past his knees, and a
crust covered his lower legs like a pair of white greaves. His
steps were dragging, lurching. The heavy pack he carried made him
look like some monstrous hunchback. And he was tired, so tired. I
can’t go on. Mother have mercy, I can’t.
Every fourth or fifth step he had to reach down and tug up his
swordbelt. He had lost the sword on the Fist, but the scabbard
still weighed down the belt. He did have two knives; the
dragonglass dagger Jon had given him and the steel one he cut his
meat with. All that weight dragged heavy, and his belly was so big
and round that if he forgot to tug the belt slipped right off and
tangled round his ankles, no matter how tight he cinched it. He had
tried belting it above his belly once, but then it came almost to
his armpits. Grenn had laughed himself sick at the sight of it, and
Dolorous Edd had said, “I knew a man once who wore his sword
on a chain around his neck like that. One day he stumbled, and the
hilt went up his nose.”
Sam was stumbling himself. There were rocks beneath the snow,
and the roots of trees, and sometimes deep holes in the frozen
ground. Black Bernarr had stepped in one and broken his ankle three
days past, or maybe four, or . . . he did not
know how long it had been, truly. The Lord Commander had put
Bernarr on a horse after that.
Sobbing, Sam took another step. It felt more like he was falling
down than walking, falling endlessly but never hitting the ground,
just falling forward and forward. I have to stop, it hurts too
much. I’m so cold and tired, I need to sleep, just a little
sleep beside a fire, and a bite to eat that isn’t frozen.
But if he stopped he died. He knew that. They all knew that, the
few who were left. They had been fifty when they fled the Fist,
maybe more, but some had wandered off in the snow, a few wounded
had bled to death . . . and sometimes Sam heard
shouts behind him, from the rear guard, and once an awful scream.
When he heard that he had run, twenty yards or thirty, as fast and
as far as he could, his half-frozen feet kicking up the snow, He
would be running still if his legs were stronger. They are behind
us, they are still behind us, they are taking us one by one.
Sobbing, Sam took another step. He had been cold so long he was
forgetting what it was like to feel warm. He wore three pairs of
hose, two layers of smallclothes beneath a double lambswool tunic,
and over that a thick quilted coat that padded him against the cold
steel of his chainmail. Over the hauberk he had a loose surcoat,
over that a triple-thick cloak with a bone button that fastened
tight under his chins. Its hood flopped forward over his forehead.
Heavy fur mitts covered his hands over thin wool-and-leather
gloves, a scarf was wrapped snugly about the lower half of his
face, and he had a tight-fitting fleece-lined cap to pull down over
his ears beneath the hood. And still the cold was in him. His feet
especially. He couldn’t even feel them now, but only
yesterday they had hurt so bad he could hardly bear to stand on
them, let alone walk. Every step made him want to scream. Was that
yesterday? He could not remember. He had not slept since the Fist,
not once since the horn had blown. Unless it was while he was
walking. Could a man walk while he was sleeping? Sam did not know,
or else he had forgotten.
Sobbing, he took another step. The snow swirled down around him.
Sometimes it fell from a white sky, and sometimes from a black, but
that was all that remained of day and night. He wore it on his
shoulders like a second cloak, and it piled up high atop the pack
he carried and made it even heavier and harder to bear. The small
of his back hurt abominably, as if someone had shoved a knife in
there and was wiggling it back and forth with every step. His
shoulders were in agony from the weight of the mail. He would have
given most anything to take it off, but he was afraid to. Anyway he
would have needed to remove his cloak and surcoat to get at it, and
then the cold would have him. If only I was stronger . . . he
wasn’t, though, and it was no good wishing. Sam was weak, and
fat, so very fat, he could hardly bear his own weight, the mail was
much too much for him. It felt as though it was rubbing his
shoulders raw, despite the layers of cloth and quilt between the
steel and skin. The only thing he could do was cry, and when he
cried the tears froze on his cheeks.
Sobbing, he took another step. The crust was broken where he set
his feet, otherwise he did not think he could have moved at all.
Off to the left and right, half-seen through the silent trees,
torches turned to vague orange haloes in the falling snow. When he
turned his head he could see them, slipping silent through the
wood, bobbing up and down and back and forth. The Old Bear’s
ring of fire, he reminded himself, and woe to him who leaves it. As
he walked, it seemed as if he were chasing the torches ahead of
him, but they had legs as well, longer and stronger than his, so he
could never catch them.
Yesterday he begged for them to let him be one of the
torchbearers, even if it meant walking outside of the column with
the darkness pressing close. He wanted the fire, dreamed of the
fire. If I had the fire, I would not be cold. But someone reminded
him that he’d had a torch at the start, but he’d
dropped it in the snow and snuffed the fire out. Sam didn’t
remember dropping any torch, but he supposed it was true. He was
too weak to hold his arm up for long. Was it Edd who reminded him
about the torch, or Grenn? He couldn’t remember that either.
Fat and weak and useless, even my wits are freezing now. He took
another step.
He had wrapped his scarf over his nose and mouth, but it was
covered with snot now, and so stiff he feared it must be frozen to
his face. Even breathing was hard, and the air was so cold it hurt
to swallow it. “Mother have mercy,” he muttered in a
hushed husky voice beneath the frozen mask. “Mother have
mercy, Mother have mercy, Mother have mercy.” With each
prayer he took another step, dragging his legs through the snow.
“Mother have mercy, Mother have mercy, Mother have
mercy.”
His own mother was a thousand leagues south, safe with his
sisters and his little brother Dickon in the keep at Horn Hill. She
can’t hear me, no more than the Mother Above. The Mother was
merciful, all the septons agreed, but the Seven had no power beyond
the Wall. This was where the old gods ruled, the nameless gods of
the trees and the wolves and the snows. “Mercy,” he
whispered then, to whatever might be listening, old gods or new, or
demons too, “oh, mercy, mercy me, mercy me.” Maslyn screamed for mercy. Why had he suddenly remembered that?
It was nothing he wanted to remember. The man had stumbled
backward, dropping his sword, pleading, yielding, even yanking off
his thick black glove and thrusting it up before him as if it were
a gauntlet. He was still shrieking for quarter as the wight lifted
him in the air by the throat and near ripped the head off him. The
dead have no mercy left in them, and the
Others . . . no, I mustn’t think of that,
don’t think, don’t remember, just walk, just walk, just
walk.
Sobbing, he took another step.
A root beneath the crust caught his toe, and Sam tripped and
fell heavily to one knee, so hard he bit his tongue. He could taste
the blood in his mouth, warmer than anything he had tasted since
the Fist. This is the end, he thought. Now that he had fallen he
could not seem to find the strength to rise again. He groped for a
tree branch and clutched it tight, trying to pull himself back to
his feet, but his stiff legs would not support him. The mail was
too heavy, and he was too fat besides, and too weak, and too
tired.
“Back on your feet, Piggy,” someone growled as he
went past, but Sam paid him no mind. I’ll just lie down in
the snow and close my eyes. It wouldn’t be so bad, dying
here. He couldn’t possibly be any colder, and after a little
while he wouldn’t be able to feel the ache in his lower back
or the terrible pain in his shoulders, no more than he could feel
his feet. I won’t be the first to die, they can’t say I
was. Hundreds had died on the Fist, they had died all around him,
and more had died after, he’d seen them. Shivering, Sam
released his grip on the tree and eased himself down in the snow.
It was cold and wet, he knew, but he could scarcely feel it through
all his clothing. He stared upward at the pale white sky as
snowflakes drifted down upon his stomach and his chest and his
eyelids. The snow will cover me like a thick white blanket. It will
be warm under the snow, and if they speak of me they’ll have
to say I died a man of the Night’s Watch. I did. I did. I did
my duty. No one can say I forswore myself. I’m fat and
I’m weak and I’m craven, but I did my duty.
The ravens had been his responsibility. That was why they had
brought him along. He hadn’t wanted to go, he’d told
them so, he’d told them all what a big coward he was. But
Maester Aemon was very old and blind besides, so they had to send
Sam to tend to the ravens. The Lord Commander had given him his
orders when they made their camp on the Fist. “You’re
no fighter. We both know that, boy. If it happens that we’re
attacked, don’t go trying to prove otherwise, you’ll
just get in the way. You’re to send a message. And
don’t come running to ask what the letter should say. Write
it out yourself, and send one bird to Castle Black and another to
the Shadow Tower.” The Old Bear pointed a gloved finger right
in Sam’s face. “I don’t care if you’re so
scared you foul your breeches, and I don’t care if a thousand
wildlings are coming over the walls howling for your blood, you get
those birds off, or I swear I’ll hunt you through all seven
hells and make you damn sorry that you didn’t.” And
Mormont’s own raven had bobbed its head up and down and
croaked, “Sorry, sorry, sorry.”
Sam was sorry; sorry he hadn’t been braver, or stronger,
or good with swords, that he hadn’t been a better son to his
father and a better brother to Dickon and the girls. He was sorry
to die too, but better men had died on the Fist, good men and true,
not squeaking fat boys like him. At least he would not have the Old
Bear hunting him through hell, though. I got the birds off. I did
that right, at least. He had written out the messages ahead of
time, short messages and simple, telling of an attack on the Fist
of the First Men, and then he had tucked them away safe in his
parchment pouch, hoping he would never need to send them.
When the horns blew Sam had been sleeping. He thought he was
dreaming them at first, but when he opened his eyes snow was
falling on the camp and the black brothers were all grabbing bows
and spears and running toward the ringwall. Chett was the only one
nearby, Maester Aemon’s old steward with the face full of
boils and the big wen on his neck. Sam had never seen so much fear
on a man’s face as he saw on Chett’s when that third
blast came moaning through the trees. “Help me get the birds
off,” he pleaded, but the other steward had turned and run
off, dagger in hand. He has the dogs to care for, Sam remembered.
Probably the Lord Commander had given him some orders as well.
His fingers had been so stiff and clumsy in the gloves, and he
was shaking from fear and cold, but he found the parchment pouch
and dug out the messages he’d written. The ravens were
shrieking furiously, and when he opened the Castle Black cage one
of them flew right in his face. Two more escaped before Sam could
catch one, and when he did it pecked him through his glove, drawing
blood. Yet somehow he held on long enough to attach the little roll
of parchment. The warhorn had fallen silent by then, but the Fist
rang with shouted commands and the clatter of steel.
“Fly!” Sam called as he tossed the raven into the
air.
The birds in the Shadow Tower cage were screaming and fluttering
about so madly that he was afraid to open the door, but he made
himself do it anyway. This time he caught the first raven that
tried to escape. A moment later, it was clawing its way up through
the falling snow, bearing word of the attack.
His duty done, he finished dressing with clumsy, frightened
fingers, donning his cap and surcoat and hooded cloak and buckling
on his swordbelt, buckling it real tight so it wouldn’t fall
down. Then he found his pack and stuffed all his things inside,
spare smallclothes and dry socks, the dragonglass arrowheads and
spearhead Jon had given him and the old horn too, his parchments,
inks, and quills, the maps he’d been drawing, and a rock-hard
garlic sausage he’d been saving since the Wall. He tied it
all up and shouldered the pack onto his back. The Lord Commander
said I wasn’t to rush to the ringwall, he recalled, but he
said I shouldn’t come running to him either. Sam took a deep
breath and realized that he did not know what to do next.
He remembered turning in a circle, lost, the fear growing inside
him as it always did. There were dogs barking and horses
trumpeting, but the snow muffled the sounds and made them seem far
away. Sam could see nothing beyond three yards, not even the
torches burning along the low stone wall that ringed the crown of
the hill. Could the torches have gone out? That was too scary to
think about. The horn blew thrice long, three long blasts means
Others. The white walkers of the wood, the cold shadows, the
monsters of the tales that made him squeak and tremble as a boy,
riding their giant ice-spiders, hungry for
blood . . .
Awkwardly he drew his sword, and plodded heavily through the
snow holding it. A dog ran past barking, and he saw some of the men
from the Shadow Tower, big bearded men with longaxes and eight-foot
spears. He felt safer for their company, so he followed them to the
wall. When he saw the torches still burning atop the ring of stones
a shudder of relief went through him.
The black brothers stood with swords and spears in hand,
watching the snow fall, waiting. Ser Mallador Locke went by on his
horse, wearing a snow-speckled helm. Sam stood well back behind the
others, looking for Grenn or Dolorous Edd. If I have to die, let me
die beside my friends, he remembered thinking. But all the men
around him were strangers, Shadow Tower men under the command of
the ranger named Blane.
“Here they come,” he heard a brother say.
“Notch,” said Blane, and twenty black arrows were
pulled from as many quivers, and notched to as many bowstrings.
“Gods be good, there’s hundreds,” a voice said
softly.
“Draw,” Blane said, and then, “hold.”
Sam could not see and did not want to see. The men of the
Night’s Watch stood behind their torches, waiting with arrows
pulled back to their ears, as something came up that dark, slippery
slope through the snow. “Hold,” Blane said again,
“hold, hold.” And then, “Loose.”
The arrows whispered as they flew.
A ragged cheer went up from the men along the ringwall, but it
died quickly. “They’re not stopping,
m’lord,” a man said to Blane, and another shouted,
“More! Look there, coming from the trees,” and yet
another said, “Gods ha’ mercy, they’s crawling.
They’s almost here, they’s on us!” Sam had been
backing away by then, shaking like the last leaf on the tree when
the wind kicks up, as much from cold as from fear. It had been very
cold that night. Even colder than now. The snow feels almost warm. I
feel better now. A little rest was all I needed. Maybe in a little
while I’ll be strong enough to walk again. In a little
while.
A horse stepped past his head, a shaggy grey beast with snow in
its mane and hooves crusted with ice. Sam watched it come and
watched it go. Another appeared from out of the falling snow, with
a man in black leading it. When he saw Sam in his path he cursed
him and led the horse around. I wish I had a horse, he thought. If
I had a horse I could keep going. I could sit, and even sleep some
in the saddle. Most of their mounts had been lost at the Fist,
though, and those that remained carried their food, their torches,
and their wounded. Sam wasn’t wounded. Only fat and weak, and
the greatest craven in the Seven Kingdoms.
He was such a coward. Lord Randyll, his father, had always said
so, and he had been right. Sam was his heir, but he had never been
worthy, so his father had sent him away to the Wall. His little
brother Dickon would inherit the Tarly lands and castle, and the
greatsword Heartsbane that the lords of Horn Hill had borne so
proudly for centuries. He wondered whether Dickon would shed a tear
for his brother who died in the snow, somewhere off beyond the edge
of the world. Why should he? A coward’s not worth weeping
over. He had heard his father tell his mother as much, half a
hundred times. The Old Bear knew it too.
“Fire arrows,” the Lord Commander roared that night
on the Fist, when he appeared suddenly astride his horse,
“give them flame.” It was then he noticed Sam there
quaking. “Tarly! Get out of here! Your place is with the
ravens.”
“I . . . I . . . I
got the messages away.”
“Good.” On Mormont’s shoulder his own raven
echoed, “Good, good.”
The Lord Commander looked huge in fur and mail. Behind his black
iron visor, his eyes were fierce. “You’re in the way
here. Go back to your cages. If I need to send another message, I
don’t want to have to find you first. See that the birds are
ready.” He did not wait for a response, but turned his horse
and trotted around the ring, shouting, “Fire! Give them
fire!”
Sam did not need to be told twice. He went back to the birds, as
fast as his fat legs could carry him. I should write the message
ahead of time, he thought, so we can get the birds away as fast as
need be. It took him longer than it should have to light his little
fire, to warm the frozen ink. He sat beside it on a rock with quill
and parchment, and wrote his messages. Attacked amidst snow and cold, but we’ve thrown them back
with fire arrows, he wrote, as he heard Thoren Smallwood’s
voice ring out with a command of, “Notch,
draw . . . loose.” The flight of arrows
made a sound as sweet as a mother’s prayer. “Burn, you
dead bastards, burn,” Dywen sang out, cackling. The brothers
cheered and cursed. All safe, he wrote. We remain on the Fist of
the First Men. Sam hoped they were better archers than him.
He put that note aside and found another blank parchment. Still
fighting on the Fist, amidst heavy snow, he wrote when someone
shouted, “They’re still coming.” Result
uncertain. “Spears,” someone said. It might have been
Ser Mallador, but Sam could not swear to it. Wights attacked us on
the Fist, in snow, he wrote, but we drove them off with fire. He
turned his head. Through the drifting snow, all he could see was
the huge fire at the center of the camp, with mounted men moving
restlessly around it. The reserve, he knew, ready to ride down
anything that breached the ringwall. They had armed themselves with
torches in place of swords, and were lighting them in the
flames. Wights all around us, he wrote, when he heard the shouts from
the north face. Coming up from north and south at once. Spears and
swords don’t stop them, only fire. “Loose, loose,
loose,” a voice screamed in the night, and another shouted,
“Bloody huge,” and a third voice said, “A
giant!” and a fourth insisted, “A bear, a bear!”
A horse shrieked and the hounds began to bay, and there was so much
shouting that Sam couldn’t make out the voices anymore. He
wrote faster, note after note. Dead wildlings, and a giant, or
maybe a bear, on us, all around. He heard the crash of steel on
wood, which could only mean one thing. Wights over the ringwall.
Fighting inside the camp. A dozen mounted brothers pounded past him
toward the east wall, burning brands streaming flames in each
rider’s hand. Lord Commander Mormont is meeting them with
fire. We’ve won. We’re winning. We’re holding our
own. We’re cutting our way free and retreating for the Wall.
We’re trapped on the Fist, hard pressed.
One of the Shadow Tower men came staggering out of the darkness
to fall at Sam’s feet. He crawled within a foot of the fire
before he died. Lost, Sam wrote, the battle’s lost.
We’re all lost.
Why must he remember the fight at the Fist? He didn’t want
to remember. Not that. He tried to make himself remember his
mother, or his little sister Talla, or that girl Gilly at
Craster’s Keep. Someone was shaking him by the shoulder.
“Get up,” a voice said. “Sam, you can’t go
to sleep here. Get up and keep walking.” I wasn’t asleep, I was remembering. “Go away,”
he said, his words frosting in the cold air. “I’m well.
I want to rest.”
“Get up.” Grenn’s voice, harsh and husky. He
loomed over Sam, his blacks crusty with snow. “There’s
no resting, the Old Bear said. You’ll die.”
“Grenn.” He smiled. “No, truly, I’m good
here. You just go on. I’ll catch you after I’ve rested
a bit longer.”
“You won’t.” Grenn’s thick brown beard
was frozen all around his mouth. It made him look like some old
man. “You’ll freeze, or the Others will get you. Sam,
get up!”
The night before they left the Wall, Pyp had teased Grenn the
way he did, Sam remembered, smiling and saying how Grenn was a good
choice for the ranging, since he was too stupid to be terrified.
Grenn hotly denied it until he realized what he was saying. He was
stocky and thick-necked and strong—Ser Alliser Thorne had called
him “Aurochs,” the same way he called Sam “Ser
Piggy” and Jon “Lord Snow”—but he had always
treated Sam nice enough. That was only because of Jon, though. If
it weren’t for Jon, none of them would have liked me. And now
Jon was gone, lost in the Skirling Pass with Qhorin Halfhand, most
likely dead. Sam would have cried for him, but those tears would
only freeze as well, and he could scarcely keep his eyes open
now.
A tall brother with a torch stopped beside them, and for a
wonderful moment Sam felt the warmth on his face. “Leave
him,” the man said to Grenn. “If they can’t walk,
they’re done. Save your strength for yourself,
Grenn.”
“He’ll get up,” Grenn replied. “He only
needs a hand.”
The man moved on, taking the blessed warmth with him. Grenn
tried to pull Sam to his feet. “That hurts,” he
complained. “Stop it. Grenn, you’re hurting my arm.
Stop it.”
“You’re too bloody heavy.” Grenn jammed his
hands into Sam’s armpits, gave a grunt, and hauled him
upright. But the moment he let go, the fat boy sat back down in the
snow. Grenn kicked him, a solid thump that cracked the crust of
snow around his boot and sent it flying everywhere. “Get
up!” He kicked him again. “Get up and walk. You have to
walk.”
Sam fell over sideways, curling up into a tight ball to protect
himself from the kicks. He hardly felt them through all his wool
and leather and mail, but even so, they hurt. I thought Grenn was
my friend. You shouldn’t kick your friends. Why won’t
they let me be? I just need to rest, that’s all, to rest and
sleep some, and maybe die a little.
“If you take the torch, I can take the fat boy.”
Suddenly he was jerked up into the cold air, away from his sweet
soft snow; he was floating. There was an arm under his knees, and
another one under his back. Sam raised his head and blinked. A face
loomed close, a broad brutal face with a flat nose and small dark
eyes and a thicket of coarse brown beard. He had seen the face
before, but it took him a moment to remember. Paul. Small Paul.
Melting ice ran down into his eyes from the heat of the torch.
“Can you carry him?” he heard Grenn ask.
“I carried a calf once was heavier than him. I carried him
down to his mother so he could get a drink of milk.”
Sam’s head bobbed up and down with every step that Small
Paul took. “Stop it,” he muttered, “put me down,
I’m not a baby. I’m a man of the Night’s
Watch.” He sobbed. “Just let me die.”
“Be quiet, Sam,” said Grenn. “Save your
strength. Think about your sisters and brother. Maester Aemon. Your
favorite foods. Sing a song if you like.”
“Aloud?”
“In your head.”
Sam knew a hundred songs, but when he tried to think of one he
couldn’t. The words had all gone from his head. He sobbed
again and said, “I don’t know any songs, Grenn. I did
know some, but now I don’t.”
“Yes you do,” said Grenn. “How about
‘The Bear and the Maiden Fair’ everybody knows that
one. A bear there was, a bear, a bear! All black and brown and
covered with hair!”
“No, not that one,” Sam pleaded. The bear that had
come up the Fist had no hair left on its rotted flesh. He
didn’t want to think about bears. “No songs. Please,
Grenn.”
“Think about your ravens, then.”
“They were never mine.” They were the Lord
Commander’s ravens, the ravens of the Night’s Watch.
“They belonged to Castle Black and the Shadow
Tower.”
Small Paul frowned. “Chett said I could have the Old
Bear’s raven, the one that talks. I saved food for it and
everything.” He shook his head. “I forgot, though. I
left the food where I hid it.” He plodded onward, pale white
breath coming from his mouth with every step, then suddenly said,
“Could I have one of your ravens? Just the one. I’d
never let Lark eat it.”
“They’re gone,” said Sam. “I’m
sorry.” So sorry. “They’re flying back to the
Wall now.” He had set the birds free when he’d heard
the warhorns sound once more, calling the Watch to horse. Two short
blasts and a long one, that was the call to mount up. But there was
no reason to mount, unless to abandon the Fist, and that meant the
battle was lost. The fear bit him so strong then that it was all
Sam could do to open the cages. Only as he watched the last raven
flap up into the snowstorm did he realize that he had forgotten to
send any of the messages he’d written.
“No,” he’d squealed, “oh, no, oh,
no.” The snow fell and the horns blew; ahooo ahooo
ahooooooooooooooooooo, they cried, to horse, to horse, to horse.
Sam saw two ravens perched on a rock and ran after them, but the
birds flapped off lazily through the swirling snow, in opposite
directions. He chased one, his breath puffing out his nose in thick
white clouds, stumbled, and found himself ten feet from the
ringwall.
After that . . . he remembered the dead
coming over the stones with arrows in their faces and through their
throats. Some were all in ringmail and some were almost
naked . . . wildlings, most of them, but a few
wore faded blacks. He remembered one of the Shadow Tower men
shoving his spear through a wight’s pale soft belly and out
his back, and how the thing staggered right up the shaft and
reached out his black hands and twisted the brother’s head
around until blood came out his mouth. That was when his bladder
let go the first time, he was almost sure.
He did not remember running, but he must have, because the next
he knew he was near the fire half a camp away, with old Ser Ottyn
Wythers and some archers. Ser Ottyn was on his knees in the snow,
staring at the chaos around them, until a riderless horse came by
and kicked him in the face. The archers paid him no mind. They were
loosing fire arrows at shadows in the dark. Sam saw one wight hit,
saw the flames engulf it, but there were a dozen more behind it,
and a huge pale shape that must have been the bear, and soon enough
the bowmen had no arrows.
And then Sam found himself on a horse. It wasn’t his own
horse, and he never recalled mounting up either. Maybe it was the
horse that had smashed Ser Ottyn’s face in. The horns were
still blowing, so he kicked the horse and turned him toward the
sound.
In the midst of carnage and chaos and blowing snow, he found
Dolorous Edd sitting on his garron with a plain black banner on a
spear. “Sam,” Edd said when he saw him, “would
you wake me, please? I am having this terrible
nightmare.”
More men were mounting up every moment. The warhorns called them
back. Ahooo ahooo ahooooooooooooooooooo. “They’re over
the west wall, m’lord,” Thoren Smallwood screamed at
the Old Bear, as he fought to control his horse. “I’ll
send reserves . . . ”
“NO!” Mormont had to bellow at the top of his lungs
to be heard over the horns. “Call them back, we have to cut
our way out.” He stood in his stirrups, his black cloak
snapping in the wind, the fire shining off his armor.
“Spearhead!” he roared. “Form wedge, we ride.
Down the south face, then east!”
“My lord, the south slope’s crawling with
them!”
“The others are too steep,” Mormont said. “We
have—”
His garron screamed and reared and almost threw him as the bear
came staggering through the snow. Sam pissed himself all over
again. I didn’t think I had any more left inside me. The bear
was dead, pale and rotting, its fur and skin all sloughed off and
half its right arm burned to bone, yet still it came on. Only its
eyes lived. Bright blue, just as Jon said. They shone like frozen
stars. Thoren Smallwood charged, his longsword shining all orange
and red from the light of the fire. His swing near took the
bear’s head off. And then the bear took his.
“RIDE!” the Lord Commander shouted, wheeling.
They were at the gallop by the time they reached the ring. Sam
had always been too frightened to jump a horse before, but when the
low stone wall loomed up before him he knew he had no choice. He
kicked and closed his eyes and whimpered, and the garron took him
over, somehow, somehow, the garron took him over. The rider to his
right came crashing down in a tangle of steel and leather and
screaming horseflesh, and then the wights were swarming over him
and the wedge was closing up. They plunged down the hillside at a
run, through clutching black hands and burning blue eyes and
blowing snow. Horses stumbled and rolled, men were swept from their
saddles, torches spun through the air, axes and swords hacked at
dead flesh, and Samwell Tarly sobbed, clutching desperately to his
horse with a strength he never knew he had.
He was in the middle of the flying spearhead with brothers on
either side, and before and behind him as well. A dog ran with them
for a ways, bounding down the snowy slope and in and out among the
horses, but it could not keep up. The wights stood their ground and
were ridden down and trampled underhoof. Even as they fell they
clutched at swords and stirrups and the legs of passing horses. Sam
saw one claw open a garron’s belly with its right hand while
it clung to the saddle with its left.
Suddenly the trees were all about them, and Sam was splashing
through a frozen stream with the sounds of slaughter dwindling
behind. He turned, breathless with
relief . . . until a man in black leapt from
the brush and yanked him out of the saddle. Who he was, Sam never
saw; he was up in an instant, and galloping away the next. When he
tried to run after the horse, his feet tangled in a root and he
fell hard on his face and lay weeping like a baby until Dolorous
Edd found him there.
That was his last coherent memory of the Fist of the First Men.
Later, hours later, he stood shivering among the other survivors,
half mounted and half afoot. They were miles from the Fist by then,
though Sam did not remember how. Dywen had led down five
packhorses, heavy laden with food and oil and torches, and three
had made it this far. The Old Bear made them redistribute the
loads, so the loss of any one horse and its provisions would not be
such a catastrophe. He took garrons from the healthy men and gave
them to the wounded, organized the walkers, and set torches to
guard their flanks and rear. All I need do is walk, Sam told
himself, as he took that first step toward home. But before an hour
was gone he had begun to struggle, and to
lag . . .
They were lagging now as well, he saw. He remembered Pyp saying
once how Small Paul was the strongest man in the Watch. He must be,
to carry me. Yet even so, the snow was growing deeper, the ground
more treacherous, and Paul’s strides had begun to shorten.
More horsemen passed, wounded men who looked at Sam with dull
incurious eyes. Some torch bearers went by as well.
“You’re falling behind,” one told them. The next
agreed. “No one’s like to wait for you, Paul. Leave the
pig for the dead men.”
“He promised I could have a bird,” Small Paul said,
even though Sam hadn’t, not truly. They aren’t mine to
give. “I want me a bird that talks, and eats corn from my
hand.”
“Bloody fool,” the torch man said. Then he was
gone.
It was a while after when Grenn stopped suddenly.
“We’re alone,” he said in a hoarse voice.
“I can’t see the other torches. Was that the rear
guard?”
Small Paul had no answer for him. The big man gave a grunt and
sank to his knees. His arms trembled as he lay Sam gently in the
snow. “I can’t carry you no more. I would, but I
can’t.” He shivered violently.
The wind sighed through the trees, driving a fine spray of snow
into their faces. The cold was so bitter that Sam felt naked. He
looked for the other torches, but they were gone, every one of
them. There was only the one Grenn carried, the flames rising from
it like pale orange silks. He could see through them, to the black
beyond. That torch will burn out soon, he thought, and we are all
alone, without food or friends or fire.
But that was wrong. They weren’t alone at all.
The lower branches of the great green sentinel shed their burden
of snow with a soft wet plop. Grenn spun, thrusting out his torch.
“Who goes there?” A horse’s head emerged from the
darkness. Sam felt a moment’s relief, until he saw the horse.
Hoarfrost covered it like a sheen of frozen sweat, and a nest of
stiff black entrails dragged from its open belly. On its back was a
rider pale as ice. Sam made a whimpery sound deep in his throat. He
was so scared he might have pissed himself all over again, but the
cold was in him, a cold so savage that his bladder felt frozen
solid. The Other slid gracefully from the saddle to stand upon the
snow. Sword-slim it was, and milky white. Its armor rippled and
shifted as it moved, and its feet did not break the crust of the
new-fallen snow.
Small Paul unslung the long-hafted axe strapped across his back.
“Why’d you hurt that horse? That was Mawney’s
horse.”
Sam groped for the hilt of his sword, but the scabbard was
empty. He had lost it on the Fist, he remembered too late.
“Get away!” Grenn took a step, thrusting the torch
out before him. “Away, or you burn.” He poked at it with
the flames.
The Other’s sword gleamed with a faint blue glow. It moved
toward Grenn, lightning quick, slashing. When the ice blue blade
brushed the flames, a screech stabbed Sam’s ears sharp as a
needle. The head of the torch tumbled sideways to vanish beneath a
deep drift of snow, the fire snuffed out at once. And all Grenn
held was a short wooden stick. He flung it at the Other, cursing,
as Small Paul charged in with his axe.
The fear that filled Sam then was worse than any fear he had
ever felt before, and Samwell Tarly knew every kind of fear.
“Mother have mercy,” he wept, forgetting the old gods
in his terror. “Father protect me, oh
oh . . . ” His fingers found his dagger
and he filled his hand with that.
The wights had been slow clumsy things, but the Other was light
as snow on the wind. It slid away from Paul’s axe, armor
rippling, and its crystal sword twisted and spun and slipped
between the iron rings of Paul’s mail, through leather and wool and bone and flesh.
It came out his back with a hissssssssssss and Sam heard Paul say,
“Oh,” as he lost the axe. Impaled, his blood smoking
around the sword, the big man tried to reach his killer with his
hands and almost had before he fell. The weight of him tore the
strange pale sword from the Other’s grip. Do it now. Stop crying and fight, you baby. Fight, craven. It was
his father he heard, it was Alliser Thorne, it was his brother
Dickon and the boy Rast. Craven, craven, craven. He giggled
hysterically, wondering if they would make a wight of him, a huge
fat white wight always tripping over its own dead feet. Do it, Sam.
Was that Jon, now? Jon was dead. You can do it, you can, just do
it. And then he was stumbling forward, falling more than running,
really, closing his eyes and shoving the dagger blindly out before
him with both hands. He heard a crack, like the sound ice makes
when it breaks beneath a man’s foot, and then a screech so
shrill and sharp that he went staggering backward with his hands
over his muffled ears, and fell hard on his arse.
When he opened his eyes the Other’s armor was running down
its legs in rivulets as pale blue blood hissed and steamed around
the black dragonglass dagger in its throat. It reached down with
two bone-white hands to pull out the knife, but where its fingers
touched the obsidian they smoked.
Sam rolled onto his side, eyes wide as the Other shrank and
puddled, dissolving away. In twenty heartbeats its flesh was gone,
swirling away in a fine white mist. Beneath were bones like
milkglass, pale and shiny, and they were melting too. Finally only
the dragonglass dagger remained, wreathed in steam as if it were
alive and sweating. Grenn bent to scoop it up and flung it down
again at once. “Mother, that’s cold.”
“Obsidian.” Sam struggled to his knees.
“Dragonglass, they call it. Dragonglass. Dragon glass.”
He giggled, and cried, and doubled over to heave his courage out
onto the snow.
Grenn pulled Sam to his feet, checked Small Paul for a pulse and
closed his eyes, then snatched up the dagger again. This time he
was able to hold it.
“You keep it,” Sam said. “You’re not
craven like me.”
“So craven you killed an Other.” Grenn pointed with
the knife. “Look there, through the trees. Pink light. Dawn,
Sam. Dawn. That must be east. If we head that way, we should catch
Mormont.”
“If you say.” Sam kicked his left foot against a
tree, to knock off all the snow. Then the right. “I’ll
try.” Grimacing, he took a step. “I’ll try
hard.” And then another.