They carried the corpses in upon their shoulders and laid them
beneath the dais. A silence fell across the torchlit hall, and in
the quiet Catelyn could hear Grey Wind howling half a castle away.
He smells the blood, she thought, through stone walls and wooden
doors, through night and rain, he still knows the scent of death
and ruin.
She stood at Robb’s left hand beside the high seat, and
for a moment felt almost as if she were looking down at her own
dead, at Bran and Rickon. These boys had been much older, but death
had shrunken them. Naked and wet, they seemed such little things,
so still it was hard to remember them living.
The blond boy had been trying to grow a beard. Pale yellow peach
fuzz covered his cheeks and jaw above the red ruin the knife had
made of his throat. His long golden hair was still wet, as if he
had been pulled from a bath. By the look of him, he had died
peacefully, perhaps in sleep, but his brown-haired cousin had
fought for life. His arms bore slashes where he’d tried to
block the blades, and red still trickled slowly from the stab
wounds that covered his chest and belly and back like so many
tongueless mouths, though the rain had washed him almost clean.
Robb had donned his crown before coming to the hall, and the
bronze shone darkly in the torchlight. Shadows hid his eyes as he
looked upon the dead. Does he see Bran and Rickon as well? She
might have wept, but there were no tears left in her. The dead boys
were pale from long imprisonment, and both had been fair; against
their smooth white skin, the blood was shockingly red, unbearable
to look upon. Will they lay Sansa down naked beneath the Iron
Throne after they have killed her? Will her skin seem as white, her blood as red? From outside came
the steady wash of rain and the restless howling of a wolf.
Her brother Edmure stood to Robb’s right, one hand upon
the back of his father’s seat, his face still puffy from
sleep. They had woken him as they had her, pounding on his door in
the black of night to yank him rudely from his dreams. Were they
good dreams, brother? Do you dream of sunlight and laughter and a
maiden’s kisses? I pray you do. Her own dreams were dark and
laced with terrors.
Robb’s captains and lords bannermen stood about the hall,
some mailed and armed, others in various states of dishevelment and
undress. Ser Raynald and his uncle Ser Rolph were among them, but
Robb had seen fit to spare his queen this ugliness. The Crag is not
far from Casterly Rock, Catelyn recalled. Leyne may well have
played with these boys when all of them were children.
She looked down again upon the corpses of the squires Tion Frey
and Willem Lannister, and waited for her son to speak.
It seemed a very long time before Robb lifted his eyes from the
bloody dead. “Smalljon,” he said, “tell your
father to bring them in.” Wordless, Smalljon Umber turned to
obey, his steps echoing in the great stone hall.
As the Greatjon marched his prisoners through the doors, Catelyn
made note of how some other men stepped back to give them room, as
if treason could somehow be passed by a touch, a glance, a cough.
The captors and the captives looked much alike; big men, every one,
with thick beards and long hair. Two of the Greatjon’s men
were wounded, and three of their prisoners. Only the fact that some
had spears and others empty scabbards served to set them apart. All
were clad in mail hauberks or shirts of sewn rings, with heavy
boots and thick cloaks, some of wool and some of fur. The north is
hard and cold, and has no mercy, Ned had told her when she first
came to Winterfell a thousand years ago.
“Five,” said Robb when the prisoners stood before
him, wet and silent. “Is that all of them?”
“There were eight,” rumbled the Greatjon. “We
killed two taking them, and a third is dying now.”
Robb studied the faces of the captives. “It required eight
of you to kill two unarmed squires.”
Edmure Tully spoke up. “They murdered two of my men as
well, to get into the tower. Delp and Elwood.”
“It was no murder, ser,” said Lord Rickard Karstark,
no more discomfited by the ropes about his wrists than by the blood
that trickled down his face. “Any man who steps between a
father and his vengeance asks for death.”
His words rang against Catelyn’s ears, harsh and cruel as
the pounding of a war drum. Her throat was dry as bone. I did this.
These two boys died so my daughters might live.
“I saw your sons die, that night in the Whispering
Wood,” Robb told Lord Karstark. “Tion Frey did not kill
Torrhen. Willem Lannister did not slay Eddard. How then can you
call this vengeance? This was folly, and bloody murder. Your sons
died honorably on a battlefield, with swords in their
hands.”
“They died,” said Rickard Karstark, yielding no inch
of ground. “The Kingslayer cut them down. These two were of
his ilk. Only blood can pay for blood.”
“The blood of children?” Robb pointed at the
corpses. “How old were they? Twelve, thirteen?
Squires.”
“Squires die in every battle.”
“Die fighting, yes. Tion Frey and Willem Lannister gave up
their swords in the Whispering Wood. They were captives, locked in
a cell, asleep, unarmed . . . boys. Look at
them!”
Lord Karstark looked instead at Catelyn. “Tell your mother
to look at them,” he said. “She slew them, as much as
L”
Catelyn put a hand on the back of Robb’s seat. The hall
seemed to spin about her. She felt as though she might retch.
“My mother had naught to do with this,” Robb said
angrily. “This was your work. Your murder. Your
treason.”
“How can it be treason to kill Lannisters, when it is not
treason to free them?” asked Karstark harshly. “Has
Your Grace forgotten that we are at war with Casterly Rock? In war
you kill your enemies. Didn’t your father teach you that,
boy?”
“Boy?” The Greatjon dealt Rickard Karstark a buffet
with a mailed fist that sent the other lord to his knees.
“Leave him!” Robb’s voice rang with command.
Umber stepped back away from the captive.
Lord Karstark spit out a broken tooth. “Yes, Lord Umber,
leave me to the king. He means to give me a scolding before he
forgives me. That’s how he deals with treason, our King in
the North.” He smiled a wet red smile. “or should I
call you the King Who Lost the North, Your Grace?”
The Greatjon snatched a spear from the man beside him and jerked
it to his shoulder. “Let me spit him, sire. Let me open his
belly so we can see the color of his guts.”
The doors of the hall crashed open, and the Blackfish entered
with water running from his cloak and helm. Tully men-at-arms
followed him in, while outside lightning cracked across the sky and
a hard black rain pounded against the stones of Riverrun. Ser
Brynden removed his helm and went to one knee. “Your
Grace,” was all he said, but the grimness of his tone spoke
volumes.
“I will hear Ser Brynden privily, in the audience
chamber.” Robb rose to his feet. “Greatjon, keep Lord
Karstark here till I return, and hang the other seven.”
The Greatjon lowered the spear. “Even the dead
ones?”
“Yes. I will not have such fouling my lord uncle’s
rivers. Let them feed the crows.”
One of the captives dropped to his knees. “Mercy, sire. I
killed no one, I only stood at the door to watch for
guards.”
Robb considered that a moment. “Did you know what Lord
Rickard intended? Did you see the knives drawn? Did you hear the
shouts, the screams, the cries for mercy?”
“Aye, I did, but I took no part. I was only the watcher, I
swear it . . . ”
“Lord Umber,” said Robb, “this one was only
the watcher. Hang him last, so he may watch the others die. Mother,
Uncle, with me, if you please.” He turned away as the
Greatjon’s men closed upon the prisoners and drove them from
the hall at spearpoint. Outside the thunder crashed and boomed, so
loud it sounded as if the castle were coming down about their ears.
Is this the sound of a kingdom falling? Catelyn wondered.
It was dark within the audience chamber, but at least the sound
of the thunder was muffled by another thickness of wall. A servant
entered with an oil lamp to light the fire, but Robb sent him away
and kept the lamp. There were tables and chairs, but only Edmure
sat, and he rose again when he realized that the others had
remainded standing. Robb took off his crown and placed it on the
table before him.
The Blackfish shut the door. “The Karstarks are
gone.”
“All?” Was it anger or despair that thickened
Robb’s voice like that? Even Catelyn was not certain.
“All the fighting men,” Ser Brynden replied.
“A few camp followers and serving men were left with their
wounded. We questioned as many as we needed, to be certain of the
truth. They started leaving at nightfall, stealing off in ones and
twos at first, and then in larger groups. The wounded men and
servants were told to keep the campfires lit so no one would know
they’d gone, but once the rains began it didn’t
matter.”
“Will they re-form, away from Riverrun?” asked
Robb.
“No. They’ve scattered, hunting. Lord Karstark has
sworn to give the hand of his maiden daughter to any man highborn or
low who brings him the head of the Kingslayer.” Gods be good. Catelyn felt ill again.
“Near three hundred riders and twice as many mounts,
melted away in the night.” Robb rubbed his temples, where the
crown had left its mark in the soft skin above his ears. “All
the mounted strength of Karhold, lost.” Lost by me. By me, may the gods forgive me. Catelyn did not need
to be a soldier to grasp the trap Robb was in. For the moment he
held the riverlands, but his kingdom was surrounded by enemies to
every side but east, where Lysa sat aloof on her mountaintop. Even
the Trident was scarce secure so long as the Lord of the Crossing
withheld his allegiance. And now to lose the Karstarks as
well . . .
“No word of this must leave Riverrun,” her brother
Edmure said. “Lord Tywin would . . . the
Lannisters pay their debts, they are always saying that. Mother
have mercy, when he hears.” Sansa. Catelyn’s nails dug into the soft flesh of her
palms, so hard did she close her hand.
Robb gave Edmure a look that chilled. “Would you make me a
liar as well as a murderer, Uncle?”
“We need speak no falsehood. Only say nothing. Bury the
boys and hold our tongues till the war’s done. Willem was son
to Ser Kevan Lannister, and Lord Tywin’s nephew. Tion was
Lady Genna’s, and a Frey. We must keep the news from the
Twins as well, until . . . ”
“Until we can bring the murdered dead back to life?”
said Brynden Blackfish sharply. “The truth escaped with the
Karstarks, Edmure. It is too late for such games.”
“I owe their fathers truth,” said Robb. “And
justice. I owe them that as well.” He gazed at his crown, the
dark gleam of bronze, the circle of iron swords. “Lord
Rickard defied me. Betrayed me. I have no choice but to condemn
him. Gods know what the Karstark foot with Roose Bolton will do
when they hear I’ve executed their liege for a traitor.
Bolton must be warned.”
“Lord Karstark’s heir was at Harrenhal as
well,” Ser Brynden reminded him. “The eldest son, the
one the Lannisters took captive on the Green Fork.”
“Harrion. His name is Harrion.” Robb laughed
bitterly. “A king had best know the names of his enemies,
don’t you think?”
The Blackfish looked at him shrewdly. “You know that for a
certainty? That this will make young Karstark your
enemy?”
“What else would he be? I am about to kill his father,
he’s not like to thank me.”
“He might. There are sons who hate their fathers, and in a
stroke you will make him Lord of Karhold.”
Robb shook his head. “Even if Harrion were that sort, he
could never openly forgive his father’s killer. His own men
would turn on him. These are northmen, Uncle. The north
remembers.”
“Pardon him, then,” urged Edmure Tully.
Robb stared at him in frank disbelief.
Under that gaze, Edmure’s face reddened. “Spare his
life, I mean. I don’t like the taste of it any more than you,
sire. He slew my men as well. Poor Delp had only just recovered
from the wound Ser Jaime gave him. Karstark must be punished,
certainly. Keep him in chains, say.”
“A hostage?” said Catelyn. It might be
best . . .
“Yes, a hostage!” Her brother seized on her musing
as agreement. “Tell the son that so long as he remains loyal,
his father will not be harmed.
Otherwise . . . we have no hope of the Freys
now, not if I offered to marry all Lord Walder’s daughters
and carry his litter besides. If we should lose the Karstarks as
well, what hope is there?”
“What hope . . . ” Robb let out
a breath, pushed his hair back from his eyes, and said,
“We’ve had naught from Ser Rodrik in the north, no
response from Walder Frey to our new offer, only silence from the
Eyrie.” He appealed to his mother. “Will your sister
never answer us? How many times must I write her? I will not
believe that none of the birds have reached her.”
Her son wanted comfort, Catelyn realized; he wanted to hear that
it would be all right. But her king needed truth. “The birds
have reached her. Though she may tell you they did not, if it ever
comes to that. Expect no help from that quarter, Robb.
“Lysa was never brave. When we were girls together, she
would run and hide whenever she’d done something wrong.
Perhaps she thought our lord father would forget to be wroth with
her if he could not find her. It is no different now. She ran from
King’s Landing for fear, to the safest place she knows, and
she sits on her mountain hoping everyone will forget
her.”
“The knights of the Vale could make all the difference in
this war,” said Robb, “but if she will not fight, so be
it. I’ve asked only that she open the Bloody Gate for us, and
provide ships at Gulltown to take us north. The high road would be
hard, but not so hard as fighting our way up the Neck. If I could
land at White Harbor I could flank Moat Cailin and drive the
ironmen from the north in half a year.”
“It will not happen, sire,” said the Blackfish.
“Cat is right. Lady Lysa is too fearful to admit an army to
the Vale. Any army. The Bloody Gate will remain closed.”
“The Others can take her, then,” Robb cursed, in a
fury of despair. “Bloody Rickard Karstark as well. And Theon
Greyjoy, Walder Frey, Tywin Lannister, and all the rest of them.
Gods be good, why would any man ever want to be king? When everyone
was shouting King in the North, King in the North, I told
myself . . . swore to
myself . . . that I would be a good king, as
honorable as Father, strong, just, loyal to my friends and brave
when I faced my enemies . . . now I can’t
even tell one from the other. How did it all get so confused? Lord
Rickard’s fought at my side in half a dozen battles. His sons
died for me in the Whispering Wood. Tion Frey and Willem Lannister were my enemies. Yet now I
have to kill my dead friends’ father for their sakes.”
He looked at them all. “Will the Lannisters thank me for Lord
Rickard’s head? Will the Freys?”
“No,” said Brynden Blackfish, blunt as ever.
“All the more reason to spare Lord Rickard’s life
and keep him hostage,” Edmure urged.
Robb reached down with both hands, lifted the heavy
bronze-and-iron crown, and set it back atop his head, and suddenly
he was a king again. “Lord Rickard dies.”
“But why?” said Edmure. “You said yourself—”
“I know what I said, Uncle. It does not change what I must
do.” The swords in his crown stood stark and black against
his brow. “In battle I might have slain Tion and Willem
myself, but this was no battle. They were asleep in their beds,
naked and unarmed, in a cell where I put them. Rickard Karstark
killed more than a Frey and a Lannister. He killed my honor. I
shall deal with him at dawn.”
When day broke, grey and chilly, the storm had diminished to a
steady, soaking rain, yet even so the godswood was crowded. River
lords and northmen, highborn and low, knights and sellswords and
stableboys, they stood amongst the trees to see the end of the
night’s dark dance. Edmure had given commands, and a
headsman’s block had been set up before the heart tree. Rain
and leaves fell all around them as the Greatjon’s men led
Lord Rickard Karstark through the press, hands still bound. His men
already hung from Riverrun’s high walls, slumping at the end
of long ropes as the rain washed down their darkening faces.
Long Lew waited beside the block, but Robb took the poleaxe from
his hand and ordered him to step aside. “This is my
work,” he said. “He dies at my word. He must die by my
hand.”
Lord Rickard Karstark dipped his head stiffly. “For that
much, I thank you. But for naught else.” He had dressed for
death in a long black wool surcoat emblazoned with the white
sunburst of his House. “The blood of the First Men flows in
my veins as much as yours, boy. You would do well to remember that.
I was named for your grandfather. I raised my banners against King
Aerys for your father, and against King Joffrey for you. At Oxcross
and the Whispering Wood and in the Battle of the Camps, I rode
beside you, and I stood with Lord Eddard on the Trident. We are
kin, Stark and Karstark.”
“This kinship did not stop you from betraying me,”
Robb said. “And it will not save you now. Kneel, my
lord.”
Lord Rickard had spoken truly, Catelyn knew. The Karstarks
traced their descent to Karlon Stark, a younger son of Winterfell
who had put down a rebel lord a thousand years ago, and been
granted lands for his valor. The castle he built had been named
Karl’s Hold, but that soon became Karhold, and over the
centuries the Karhold Starks had become Karstarks.
“Old gods or new, it makes no matter,” Lord Rickard
told her son, “no man is so accursed as the
kinslayer.”
“Kneel, traitor,” Robb said again. “Or must I
have them force your head onto the block?”
Lord Karstark knelt. “The gods shall judge you, as you
have judged me.” He laid his head upon the block.
“Rickard Karstark, Lord of Karhold.” Robb lifted the
heavy axe with both hands. “Here in sight of gods and men, I
judge you guilty of murder and high treason. In mine own name I
condemn you. With mine own hand I take your life. Would you speak a
final word?”
“Kill me, and be cursed. You are no king of
mine.”
The axe crashed down. Heavy and well-honed, it killed at a
single blow, but it took three to sever the man’s head from
his body, and by the time it was done both living and dead were
drenched in blood. Robb flung the poleaxe down in disgust, and
turned wordless to the heart tree. He stood shaking with his hands
half-clenched and the rain running down his cheeks. Gods forgive
him, Catelyn prayed in silence. He is only a boy, and he had no
other choice.
That was the last she saw of her son that day. The rain
continued all through the morning, lashing the surface of the
rivers and turning the godswood grass into mud and puddles. The
Blackfish assembled a hundred men and rode out after Karstarks, but
no one expected he would bring back many. “I only pray I do
not need to hang them,” he said as he departed. When he was
gone, Catelyn retreated to her father’s solar, to sit once
more beside Lord Hoster’s bed.
“It will not be much longer,” Maester Vyman warned
her, when he came that afternoon. “His last strength is
going, though still he tries to fight.”
“He was ever a fighter,” she said. “A sweet
stubborn man.”
“Yes,” the maester said, “but this battle he
cannot win. It is time he lay down his sword and shield. Time to
yield.” To yield, she thought, to make a peace. Was it her father the
maester was speaking of, or her son?
At evenfall, Jeyne Westerling came to see her. The young queen
entered the solar timidly. “Lady Catelyn, I do not mean to
disturb you . . . ”
“You are most welcome here, Your Grace.” Catelyn had
been sewing, but she put the needle aside now.
“Please. Call me Jeyne. I don’t feel like a
Grace.”
“You are one, nonetheless. Please, come sit, Your
Grace.”
“Jeyne.” She sat by the hearth and smoothed her
skirt out anxiously.
“As you wish. How might I serve you, Jeyne?”
“It’s Robb,” the girl said. “He’s
so miserable, so . . . so angry and
disconsolate. I don’t know what to do.”
“It is a hard thing to take a man’s life.”
“I know. I told him, he should use a headsman. When Lord
Tywin sends a man to die, all he does is give the command.
It’s easier that way, don’t you think?”
“Yes,” said Catelyn, “but my lord husband
taught his sons that killing should never be easy.”
“Oh.” Queen Jeyne wet her lips. “Robb has not
eaten all day. I had Rollam bring him a nice supper, boar’s
ribs and stewed onions and ale, but he never touched a bite of it.
He spent all morning writing a letter and told me not to disturb
him, but when the letter was done he burned it. Now he is sitting
and looking at maps. I asked him what he was looking for, but he
never answered. I don’t think he ever heard me. He
wouldn’t even change out of his clothes. They were damp all
day, and bloody. I want to be a good wife to him, I do, but I
don’t know how to help. To cheer him, or comfort him. I
don’t know what he needs. Please, my lady, you’re his
mother, tell me what I should do.” Tell me what I should do. Catelyn might have asked the same, if
her father had been well enough to ask. But Lord Hoster was gone,
or near enough. Her Ned as well. Bran and Rickon too, and Mother,
and Brandon so long ago. Only Robb remained to her, Robb and the
fading hope of her daughters.
“Sometimes,” Catelyn said slowly, “the best
thing you can do is nothing. When I first came to Winterfell, I was
hurt whenever Ned went to the godswood to sit beneath his heart
tree. Part of his soul was in that tree, I knew, a part I would
never share. Yet without that part, I soon realized, he would not
have been Ned. Jeyne, child, you have wed the north, as I
did . . . and in the north, the winters will
come.” She tried to smile. “Be patient. Be
understanding. He loves you and he needs you, and he will come back
to you soon enough. This very night, perhaps. Be there when he
does. That is all I can tell you.”
The young queen listened raptly. “I will,” she said
when Catelyn was done. “I’ll be there.” She got
to her feet. “I should go back. He might have missed me.
I’ll see. But if he’s still at his maps, I’ll be
patient.”
“Do,” said Catelyn, but when the girl was at the
door, she thought of something else. “Jeyne,” she
called after, “there’s one more thing Robb needs from
you, though he may not know it yet himself. A king must have an
heir.”
The girl smiled at that. “My mother says the same. She
makes a posset for me, herbs and milk and ale, to help make me
fertile. I drink it every morning. I told Robb I’m sure to
give him twins. An Eddard and a Brandon. He liked that, I think.
We . . . we try most every day, my lady.
Sometimes twice or more.” The girl blushed very prettily.
“I’ll be with child soon, I promise. I pray to our
Mother Above, every night.”
“Very good. I will add my prayers as well. To the old gods
and the new.”
When the girl had gone, Catelyn turned back to her father and
smoothed the thin white hair across his brow. “An Eddard and
a Brandon,” she sighed softly. “And perhaps in time a
Hoster. Would you like that?” He did not answer, but she had
never expected that he would. As the sound of the rain on the roof
mingled with her father’s breathing, she thought about Jeyne.
The girl did seem to have a good heart, just as Robb had said. And
good hips, which might be more important.
They carried the corpses in upon their shoulders and laid them
beneath the dais. A silence fell across the torchlit hall, and in
the quiet Catelyn could hear Grey Wind howling half a castle away.
He smells the blood, she thought, through stone walls and wooden
doors, through night and rain, he still knows the scent of death
and ruin.
She stood at Robb’s left hand beside the high seat, and
for a moment felt almost as if she were looking down at her own
dead, at Bran and Rickon. These boys had been much older, but death
had shrunken them. Naked and wet, they seemed such little things,
so still it was hard to remember them living.
The blond boy had been trying to grow a beard. Pale yellow peach
fuzz covered his cheeks and jaw above the red ruin the knife had
made of his throat. His long golden hair was still wet, as if he
had been pulled from a bath. By the look of him, he had died
peacefully, perhaps in sleep, but his brown-haired cousin had
fought for life. His arms bore slashes where he’d tried to
block the blades, and red still trickled slowly from the stab
wounds that covered his chest and belly and back like so many
tongueless mouths, though the rain had washed him almost clean.
Robb had donned his crown before coming to the hall, and the
bronze shone darkly in the torchlight. Shadows hid his eyes as he
looked upon the dead. Does he see Bran and Rickon as well? She
might have wept, but there were no tears left in her. The dead boys
were pale from long imprisonment, and both had been fair; against
their smooth white skin, the blood was shockingly red, unbearable
to look upon. Will they lay Sansa down naked beneath the Iron
Throne after they have killed her? Will her skin seem as white, her blood as red? From outside came
the steady wash of rain and the restless howling of a wolf.
Her brother Edmure stood to Robb’s right, one hand upon
the back of his father’s seat, his face still puffy from
sleep. They had woken him as they had her, pounding on his door in
the black of night to yank him rudely from his dreams. Were they
good dreams, brother? Do you dream of sunlight and laughter and a
maiden’s kisses? I pray you do. Her own dreams were dark and
laced with terrors.
Robb’s captains and lords bannermen stood about the hall,
some mailed and armed, others in various states of dishevelment and
undress. Ser Raynald and his uncle Ser Rolph were among them, but
Robb had seen fit to spare his queen this ugliness. The Crag is not
far from Casterly Rock, Catelyn recalled. Leyne may well have
played with these boys when all of them were children.
She looked down again upon the corpses of the squires Tion Frey
and Willem Lannister, and waited for her son to speak.
It seemed a very long time before Robb lifted his eyes from the
bloody dead. “Smalljon,” he said, “tell your
father to bring them in.” Wordless, Smalljon Umber turned to
obey, his steps echoing in the great stone hall.
As the Greatjon marched his prisoners through the doors, Catelyn
made note of how some other men stepped back to give them room, as
if treason could somehow be passed by a touch, a glance, a cough.
The captors and the captives looked much alike; big men, every one,
with thick beards and long hair. Two of the Greatjon’s men
were wounded, and three of their prisoners. Only the fact that some
had spears and others empty scabbards served to set them apart. All
were clad in mail hauberks or shirts of sewn rings, with heavy
boots and thick cloaks, some of wool and some of fur. The north is
hard and cold, and has no mercy, Ned had told her when she first
came to Winterfell a thousand years ago.
“Five,” said Robb when the prisoners stood before
him, wet and silent. “Is that all of them?”
“There were eight,” rumbled the Greatjon. “We
killed two taking them, and a third is dying now.”
Robb studied the faces of the captives. “It required eight
of you to kill two unarmed squires.”
Edmure Tully spoke up. “They murdered two of my men as
well, to get into the tower. Delp and Elwood.”
“It was no murder, ser,” said Lord Rickard Karstark,
no more discomfited by the ropes about his wrists than by the blood
that trickled down his face. “Any man who steps between a
father and his vengeance asks for death.”
His words rang against Catelyn’s ears, harsh and cruel as
the pounding of a war drum. Her throat was dry as bone. I did this.
These two boys died so my daughters might live.
“I saw your sons die, that night in the Whispering
Wood,” Robb told Lord Karstark. “Tion Frey did not kill
Torrhen. Willem Lannister did not slay Eddard. How then can you
call this vengeance? This was folly, and bloody murder. Your sons
died honorably on a battlefield, with swords in their
hands.”
“They died,” said Rickard Karstark, yielding no inch
of ground. “The Kingslayer cut them down. These two were of
his ilk. Only blood can pay for blood.”
“The blood of children?” Robb pointed at the
corpses. “How old were they? Twelve, thirteen?
Squires.”
“Squires die in every battle.”
“Die fighting, yes. Tion Frey and Willem Lannister gave up
their swords in the Whispering Wood. They were captives, locked in
a cell, asleep, unarmed . . . boys. Look at
them!”
Lord Karstark looked instead at Catelyn. “Tell your mother
to look at them,” he said. “She slew them, as much as
L”
Catelyn put a hand on the back of Robb’s seat. The hall
seemed to spin about her. She felt as though she might retch.
“My mother had naught to do with this,” Robb said
angrily. “This was your work. Your murder. Your
treason.”
“How can it be treason to kill Lannisters, when it is not
treason to free them?” asked Karstark harshly. “Has
Your Grace forgotten that we are at war with Casterly Rock? In war
you kill your enemies. Didn’t your father teach you that,
boy?”
“Boy?” The Greatjon dealt Rickard Karstark a buffet
with a mailed fist that sent the other lord to his knees.
“Leave him!” Robb’s voice rang with command.
Umber stepped back away from the captive.
Lord Karstark spit out a broken tooth. “Yes, Lord Umber,
leave me to the king. He means to give me a scolding before he
forgives me. That’s how he deals with treason, our King in
the North.” He smiled a wet red smile. “or should I
call you the King Who Lost the North, Your Grace?”
The Greatjon snatched a spear from the man beside him and jerked
it to his shoulder. “Let me spit him, sire. Let me open his
belly so we can see the color of his guts.”
The doors of the hall crashed open, and the Blackfish entered
with water running from his cloak and helm. Tully men-at-arms
followed him in, while outside lightning cracked across the sky and
a hard black rain pounded against the stones of Riverrun. Ser
Brynden removed his helm and went to one knee. “Your
Grace,” was all he said, but the grimness of his tone spoke
volumes.
“I will hear Ser Brynden privily, in the audience
chamber.” Robb rose to his feet. “Greatjon, keep Lord
Karstark here till I return, and hang the other seven.”
The Greatjon lowered the spear. “Even the dead
ones?”
“Yes. I will not have such fouling my lord uncle’s
rivers. Let them feed the crows.”
One of the captives dropped to his knees. “Mercy, sire. I
killed no one, I only stood at the door to watch for
guards.”
Robb considered that a moment. “Did you know what Lord
Rickard intended? Did you see the knives drawn? Did you hear the
shouts, the screams, the cries for mercy?”
“Aye, I did, but I took no part. I was only the watcher, I
swear it . . . ”
“Lord Umber,” said Robb, “this one was only
the watcher. Hang him last, so he may watch the others die. Mother,
Uncle, with me, if you please.” He turned away as the
Greatjon’s men closed upon the prisoners and drove them from
the hall at spearpoint. Outside the thunder crashed and boomed, so
loud it sounded as if the castle were coming down about their ears.
Is this the sound of a kingdom falling? Catelyn wondered.
It was dark within the audience chamber, but at least the sound
of the thunder was muffled by another thickness of wall. A servant
entered with an oil lamp to light the fire, but Robb sent him away
and kept the lamp. There were tables and chairs, but only Edmure
sat, and he rose again when he realized that the others had
remainded standing. Robb took off his crown and placed it on the
table before him.
The Blackfish shut the door. “The Karstarks are
gone.”
“All?” Was it anger or despair that thickened
Robb’s voice like that? Even Catelyn was not certain.
“All the fighting men,” Ser Brynden replied.
“A few camp followers and serving men were left with their
wounded. We questioned as many as we needed, to be certain of the
truth. They started leaving at nightfall, stealing off in ones and
twos at first, and then in larger groups. The wounded men and
servants were told to keep the campfires lit so no one would know
they’d gone, but once the rains began it didn’t
matter.”
“Will they re-form, away from Riverrun?” asked
Robb.
“No. They’ve scattered, hunting. Lord Karstark has
sworn to give the hand of his maiden daughter to any man highborn or
low who brings him the head of the Kingslayer.” Gods be good. Catelyn felt ill again.
“Near three hundred riders and twice as many mounts,
melted away in the night.” Robb rubbed his temples, where the
crown had left its mark in the soft skin above his ears. “All
the mounted strength of Karhold, lost.” Lost by me. By me, may the gods forgive me. Catelyn did not need
to be a soldier to grasp the trap Robb was in. For the moment he
held the riverlands, but his kingdom was surrounded by enemies to
every side but east, where Lysa sat aloof on her mountaintop. Even
the Trident was scarce secure so long as the Lord of the Crossing
withheld his allegiance. And now to lose the Karstarks as
well . . .
“No word of this must leave Riverrun,” her brother
Edmure said. “Lord Tywin would . . . the
Lannisters pay their debts, they are always saying that. Mother
have mercy, when he hears.” Sansa. Catelyn’s nails dug into the soft flesh of her
palms, so hard did she close her hand.
Robb gave Edmure a look that chilled. “Would you make me a
liar as well as a murderer, Uncle?”
“We need speak no falsehood. Only say nothing. Bury the
boys and hold our tongues till the war’s done. Willem was son
to Ser Kevan Lannister, and Lord Tywin’s nephew. Tion was
Lady Genna’s, and a Frey. We must keep the news from the
Twins as well, until . . . ”
“Until we can bring the murdered dead back to life?”
said Brynden Blackfish sharply. “The truth escaped with the
Karstarks, Edmure. It is too late for such games.”
“I owe their fathers truth,” said Robb. “And
justice. I owe them that as well.” He gazed at his crown, the
dark gleam of bronze, the circle of iron swords. “Lord
Rickard defied me. Betrayed me. I have no choice but to condemn
him. Gods know what the Karstark foot with Roose Bolton will do
when they hear I’ve executed their liege for a traitor.
Bolton must be warned.”
“Lord Karstark’s heir was at Harrenhal as
well,” Ser Brynden reminded him. “The eldest son, the
one the Lannisters took captive on the Green Fork.”
“Harrion. His name is Harrion.” Robb laughed
bitterly. “A king had best know the names of his enemies,
don’t you think?”
The Blackfish looked at him shrewdly. “You know that for a
certainty? That this will make young Karstark your
enemy?”
“What else would he be? I am about to kill his father,
he’s not like to thank me.”
“He might. There are sons who hate their fathers, and in a
stroke you will make him Lord of Karhold.”
Robb shook his head. “Even if Harrion were that sort, he
could never openly forgive his father’s killer. His own men
would turn on him. These are northmen, Uncle. The north
remembers.”
“Pardon him, then,” urged Edmure Tully.
Robb stared at him in frank disbelief.
Under that gaze, Edmure’s face reddened. “Spare his
life, I mean. I don’t like the taste of it any more than you,
sire. He slew my men as well. Poor Delp had only just recovered
from the wound Ser Jaime gave him. Karstark must be punished,
certainly. Keep him in chains, say.”
“A hostage?” said Catelyn. It might be
best . . .
“Yes, a hostage!” Her brother seized on her musing
as agreement. “Tell the son that so long as he remains loyal,
his father will not be harmed.
Otherwise . . . we have no hope of the Freys
now, not if I offered to marry all Lord Walder’s daughters
and carry his litter besides. If we should lose the Karstarks as
well, what hope is there?”
“What hope . . . ” Robb let out
a breath, pushed his hair back from his eyes, and said,
“We’ve had naught from Ser Rodrik in the north, no
response from Walder Frey to our new offer, only silence from the
Eyrie.” He appealed to his mother. “Will your sister
never answer us? How many times must I write her? I will not
believe that none of the birds have reached her.”
Her son wanted comfort, Catelyn realized; he wanted to hear that
it would be all right. But her king needed truth. “The birds
have reached her. Though she may tell you they did not, if it ever
comes to that. Expect no help from that quarter, Robb.
“Lysa was never brave. When we were girls together, she
would run and hide whenever she’d done something wrong.
Perhaps she thought our lord father would forget to be wroth with
her if he could not find her. It is no different now. She ran from
King’s Landing for fear, to the safest place she knows, and
she sits on her mountain hoping everyone will forget
her.”
“The knights of the Vale could make all the difference in
this war,” said Robb, “but if she will not fight, so be
it. I’ve asked only that she open the Bloody Gate for us, and
provide ships at Gulltown to take us north. The high road would be
hard, but not so hard as fighting our way up the Neck. If I could
land at White Harbor I could flank Moat Cailin and drive the
ironmen from the north in half a year.”
“It will not happen, sire,” said the Blackfish.
“Cat is right. Lady Lysa is too fearful to admit an army to
the Vale. Any army. The Bloody Gate will remain closed.”
“The Others can take her, then,” Robb cursed, in a
fury of despair. “Bloody Rickard Karstark as well. And Theon
Greyjoy, Walder Frey, Tywin Lannister, and all the rest of them.
Gods be good, why would any man ever want to be king? When everyone
was shouting King in the North, King in the North, I told
myself . . . swore to
myself . . . that I would be a good king, as
honorable as Father, strong, just, loyal to my friends and brave
when I faced my enemies . . . now I can’t
even tell one from the other. How did it all get so confused? Lord
Rickard’s fought at my side in half a dozen battles. His sons
died for me in the Whispering Wood. Tion Frey and Willem Lannister were my enemies. Yet now I
have to kill my dead friends’ father for their sakes.”
He looked at them all. “Will the Lannisters thank me for Lord
Rickard’s head? Will the Freys?”
“No,” said Brynden Blackfish, blunt as ever.
“All the more reason to spare Lord Rickard’s life
and keep him hostage,” Edmure urged.
Robb reached down with both hands, lifted the heavy
bronze-and-iron crown, and set it back atop his head, and suddenly
he was a king again. “Lord Rickard dies.”
“But why?” said Edmure. “You said yourself—”
“I know what I said, Uncle. It does not change what I must
do.” The swords in his crown stood stark and black against
his brow. “In battle I might have slain Tion and Willem
myself, but this was no battle. They were asleep in their beds,
naked and unarmed, in a cell where I put them. Rickard Karstark
killed more than a Frey and a Lannister. He killed my honor. I
shall deal with him at dawn.”
When day broke, grey and chilly, the storm had diminished to a
steady, soaking rain, yet even so the godswood was crowded. River
lords and northmen, highborn and low, knights and sellswords and
stableboys, they stood amongst the trees to see the end of the
night’s dark dance. Edmure had given commands, and a
headsman’s block had been set up before the heart tree. Rain
and leaves fell all around them as the Greatjon’s men led
Lord Rickard Karstark through the press, hands still bound. His men
already hung from Riverrun’s high walls, slumping at the end
of long ropes as the rain washed down their darkening faces.
Long Lew waited beside the block, but Robb took the poleaxe from
his hand and ordered him to step aside. “This is my
work,” he said. “He dies at my word. He must die by my
hand.”
Lord Rickard Karstark dipped his head stiffly. “For that
much, I thank you. But for naught else.” He had dressed for
death in a long black wool surcoat emblazoned with the white
sunburst of his House. “The blood of the First Men flows in
my veins as much as yours, boy. You would do well to remember that.
I was named for your grandfather. I raised my banners against King
Aerys for your father, and against King Joffrey for you. At Oxcross
and the Whispering Wood and in the Battle of the Camps, I rode
beside you, and I stood with Lord Eddard on the Trident. We are
kin, Stark and Karstark.”
“This kinship did not stop you from betraying me,”
Robb said. “And it will not save you now. Kneel, my
lord.”
Lord Rickard had spoken truly, Catelyn knew. The Karstarks
traced their descent to Karlon Stark, a younger son of Winterfell
who had put down a rebel lord a thousand years ago, and been
granted lands for his valor. The castle he built had been named
Karl’s Hold, but that soon became Karhold, and over the
centuries the Karhold Starks had become Karstarks.
“Old gods or new, it makes no matter,” Lord Rickard
told her son, “no man is so accursed as the
kinslayer.”
“Kneel, traitor,” Robb said again. “Or must I
have them force your head onto the block?”
Lord Karstark knelt. “The gods shall judge you, as you
have judged me.” He laid his head upon the block.
“Rickard Karstark, Lord of Karhold.” Robb lifted the
heavy axe with both hands. “Here in sight of gods and men, I
judge you guilty of murder and high treason. In mine own name I
condemn you. With mine own hand I take your life. Would you speak a
final word?”
“Kill me, and be cursed. You are no king of
mine.”
The axe crashed down. Heavy and well-honed, it killed at a
single blow, but it took three to sever the man’s head from
his body, and by the time it was done both living and dead were
drenched in blood. Robb flung the poleaxe down in disgust, and
turned wordless to the heart tree. He stood shaking with his hands
half-clenched and the rain running down his cheeks. Gods forgive
him, Catelyn prayed in silence. He is only a boy, and he had no
other choice.
That was the last she saw of her son that day. The rain
continued all through the morning, lashing the surface of the
rivers and turning the godswood grass into mud and puddles. The
Blackfish assembled a hundred men and rode out after Karstarks, but
no one expected he would bring back many. “I only pray I do
not need to hang them,” he said as he departed. When he was
gone, Catelyn retreated to her father’s solar, to sit once
more beside Lord Hoster’s bed.
“It will not be much longer,” Maester Vyman warned
her, when he came that afternoon. “His last strength is
going, though still he tries to fight.”
“He was ever a fighter,” she said. “A sweet
stubborn man.”
“Yes,” the maester said, “but this battle he
cannot win. It is time he lay down his sword and shield. Time to
yield.” To yield, she thought, to make a peace. Was it her father the
maester was speaking of, or her son?
At evenfall, Jeyne Westerling came to see her. The young queen
entered the solar timidly. “Lady Catelyn, I do not mean to
disturb you . . . ”
“You are most welcome here, Your Grace.” Catelyn had
been sewing, but she put the needle aside now.
“Please. Call me Jeyne. I don’t feel like a
Grace.”
“You are one, nonetheless. Please, come sit, Your
Grace.”
“Jeyne.” She sat by the hearth and smoothed her
skirt out anxiously.
“As you wish. How might I serve you, Jeyne?”
“It’s Robb,” the girl said. “He’s
so miserable, so . . . so angry and
disconsolate. I don’t know what to do.”
“It is a hard thing to take a man’s life.”
“I know. I told him, he should use a headsman. When Lord
Tywin sends a man to die, all he does is give the command.
It’s easier that way, don’t you think?”
“Yes,” said Catelyn, “but my lord husband
taught his sons that killing should never be easy.”
“Oh.” Queen Jeyne wet her lips. “Robb has not
eaten all day. I had Rollam bring him a nice supper, boar’s
ribs and stewed onions and ale, but he never touched a bite of it.
He spent all morning writing a letter and told me not to disturb
him, but when the letter was done he burned it. Now he is sitting
and looking at maps. I asked him what he was looking for, but he
never answered. I don’t think he ever heard me. He
wouldn’t even change out of his clothes. They were damp all
day, and bloody. I want to be a good wife to him, I do, but I
don’t know how to help. To cheer him, or comfort him. I
don’t know what he needs. Please, my lady, you’re his
mother, tell me what I should do.” Tell me what I should do. Catelyn might have asked the same, if
her father had been well enough to ask. But Lord Hoster was gone,
or near enough. Her Ned as well. Bran and Rickon too, and Mother,
and Brandon so long ago. Only Robb remained to her, Robb and the
fading hope of her daughters.
“Sometimes,” Catelyn said slowly, “the best
thing you can do is nothing. When I first came to Winterfell, I was
hurt whenever Ned went to the godswood to sit beneath his heart
tree. Part of his soul was in that tree, I knew, a part I would
never share. Yet without that part, I soon realized, he would not
have been Ned. Jeyne, child, you have wed the north, as I
did . . . and in the north, the winters will
come.” She tried to smile. “Be patient. Be
understanding. He loves you and he needs you, and he will come back
to you soon enough. This very night, perhaps. Be there when he
does. That is all I can tell you.”
The young queen listened raptly. “I will,” she said
when Catelyn was done. “I’ll be there.” She got
to her feet. “I should go back. He might have missed me.
I’ll see. But if he’s still at his maps, I’ll be
patient.”
“Do,” said Catelyn, but when the girl was at the
door, she thought of something else. “Jeyne,” she
called after, “there’s one more thing Robb needs from
you, though he may not know it yet himself. A king must have an
heir.”
The girl smiled at that. “My mother says the same. She
makes a posset for me, herbs and milk and ale, to help make me
fertile. I drink it every morning. I told Robb I’m sure to
give him twins. An Eddard and a Brandon. He liked that, I think.
We . . . we try most every day, my lady.
Sometimes twice or more.” The girl blushed very prettily.
“I’ll be with child soon, I promise. I pray to our
Mother Above, every night.”
“Very good. I will add my prayers as well. To the old gods
and the new.”
When the girl had gone, Catelyn turned back to her father and
smoothed the thin white hair across his brow. “An Eddard and
a Brandon,” she sighed softly. “And perhaps in time a
Hoster. Would you like that?” He did not answer, but she had
never expected that he would. As the sound of the rain on the roof
mingled with her father’s breathing, she thought about Jeyne.
The girl did seem to have a good heart, just as Robb had said. And
good hips, which might be more important.