They supped alone, as they did so often.
“The pease are
overcooked,” his wife ventured once.
“No matter,”
he said. “So is the mutton.”
It was a jest, but Sansa took it for criticism. “I am
sorry, my lord.”
“Why? Some cook should be sorry. Not you. The pease are
not your province, Sansa.”
“I . . . I am sorry that my lord
husband is displeased.”
“Any displeasure I’m feeling has naught to do with
pease. I have Joffrey and my sister to displease me, and my lord
father, and three hundred bloody Dornishmen.” He had settled
Prince Oberyn and his lords in a cornerfort facing the city, as far
from the Tyrells as he could put them without evicting them from
the Red Keep entirely. It was not nearly far enough. Already there
had been a brawl in a Flea Bottom pot-shop that left one Tyrell
man-at-arms dead and two of Lord Gargalen’s scalded, and an
ugly confrontation in the yard when Mace Tyrell’s wizened
little mother called Ellaria Sand “the serpent’s
whore.” Every time he chanced to see Oberyn Martell the
prince asked when the justice would be served. Overcooked pease
were the least of Tyrion’s troubles, but he saw no point in
burdening his young wife with any of that. Sansa had enough griefs
of her own.
“The pease suffice,” he told her curtly. “They
are green and round, what more can one expect of pease? Here,
I’ll have another serving, if it please my lady.” He
beckoned, and Podrick Payne spooned so many pease onto his plate
that Tyrion lost sight of his mutton. That was stupid, he told
himself. Now I have to eat them all, or she’ll be sorry all
over again.
The supper ended in a strained silence, as so many of their
suppers did. Afterward, as Pod was removing the cups and platters,
Sansa asked Tyrion for leave to visit the godswood.
“As you wish.” He had become accustomed to his
wife’s nightly devotions. She prayed at the royal sept as
well, and often lit candles to Mother, Maid, and Crone. Tyrion
found all this piety excessive, if truth be told, but in her place
he might want the help of the gods as well. “I confess, I
know little of the old gods,” he said, trying to be pleasant.
“Perhaps someday you might enlighten me. I could even
accompany you.”
“No,” Sansa said at once.
“You . . . you are kind to offer,
but . . . there are no devotions, my lord. No
priests or songs or candles. Only trees, and silent prayer. You
would be bored.”
“No doubt you’re right.” She knows me better
than I thought. “Though the sound of rustling leaves might be
a pleasant change from some septon droning on about the seven
aspects of grace.” Tyrion waved her off. “I won’t
intrude. Dress warmly, my lady, the wind is brisk out there.”
He was tempted to ask what she prayed for, but Sansa was so dutiful
she might actually tell him, and he didn’t think he wanted to
know.
He went back to work after she left, trying to track some golden
dragons through the labyrinth of Littlefinger’s ledgers.
Petyr Baelish had not believed in letting gold sit about and grow
dusty, that was for certain, but the more Tyrion tried to make
sense of his accounts the more his head hurt. It was all very well
to talk of breeding dragons instead of locking them up in the
treasury, but some of these ventures smelled worse than week-old
fish. I wouldn’t have been so quick to let Joffrey fling the
Antler Men over the walls if I’d known how many of the bloody
bastards had taken loans from the crown. He would have to send
Bronn to find their heirs, but he feared that would prove as
fruitful as trying to squeeze silver from a silverfish.
When the summons from his lord father arrived, it was the first
time Tyrion could ever recall being pleased to see Ser Boros
Blount. He closed the ledgers gratefully, blew out the oil lamp,
tied a cloak around his shoulders, and waddled across the castle to
the Tower of the Hand. The wind was brisk, just as he’d
warned Sansa, and there was a smell of rain in the air. Perhaps
when Lord Tywin was done with him he should go to the godswood and
fetch her home before she got soaked.
But all that went straight out of his head when he entered the
Hand’s solar to find Cersei, Ser Kevan, and Grand Maester
Pycelle gathered about Lord Tywin and the king. Joffrey was almost
bouncing, and Cersei was savoring a smug little smile, though Lord
Tywin looked as grim as ever. I wonder if he could smile even if he
wanted to. “What’s happened?” Tyrion asked.
His father offered him a roll of parchment. Someone had
flattened it, but it still wanted to curl. “Roslin caught a
fine fat trout,” the message read. “Her brothers gave
her a pair of wolf pelts for her wedding.” Tyrion turned it
over to inspect the broken seal. The wax was silvery-grey, and
pressed into it were the twin towers of House Frey. “Does the
Lord of the Crossing imagine he’s being poetic? Or is this
meant to confound us?” Tyrion snorted. “The trout
would be Edmure Tully, the
pelts . . . ”
“He’s dead!” Joffrey sounded so proud and
happy you might have thought he’d skinned Robb Stark
himself. First Greyjoy and now Stark. Tyrion thought of his child wife,
praying in the godswood even now. Praying to her father’s
gods to bring her brother victory and keep her mother safe, no
doubt. The old gods paid no more heed to prayer than the new ones,
it would seem. Perhaps he should take comfort in that. “Kings
are falling like leaves this autumn,” he said. “It
would seem our little war is winning itself.”
“Wars do not win themselves, Tyrion,” Cersei said
with poisonous sweetness. “Our lord father won this
war.”
“Nothing is won so long as we have enemies in the
field,” Lord Tywin warned them.
“The river lords are no fools,” the queen argued.
“Without the northmen they cannot hope to stand against the
combined power of Highgarden, Casterly Rock, and Dorne. Surely they
will choose submission rather than destruction.”
“Most,” agreed Lord Tywin. “Riverrun remains,
but so long as Walder Frey holds Edmure Tully hostage, the
Blackfish dare not mount a threat. Jason Mallister and Tytos
Blackwood will fight on for honor’s sake, but the Freys can
keep the Mallisters penned up at Seagard, and with the right
inducement Jonos Bracken can be persuaded to change his allegiance
and attack the Blackwoods. In the end they will bend the knee, yes.
I mean to offer generous terms. Any castle that yields to us will
be spared, save one.”
“Harrenhal?” said Tyrion, who knew his sire.
“The realm is best rid of these Brave Companions. I have
commanded Ser Gregor to put the castle to the sword.” Gregor Clegane. It appeared as if his lord father meant to mine
the Mountain for every last nugget of ore before turning him over
to Dornish justice. The Brave Companions would end as heads on
spikes, and Littlefinger would stroll into Harrenhal without so
much as a spot of blood on those fine clothes of his. He wondered
if Petyr Baelish had reached the Vale yet. If the gods are good, he
ran into a storm at sea and sank. But when had the gods ever been
especially good?
“They should all be put to the sword,” Joffrey
declared suddenly. “The Mallisters and Blackwoods and
Brackens . . . all of them. They’re
traitors. I want them killed, Grandfather. I won’t have any generous
terms.” The king turned to Grand Maester Pycelle. “And
I want Robb Stark’s head too. Write to Lord Frey and tell
him. The king commands. I’m going to have it served to Sansa
at my wedding feast.”
“Sire,” Ser Kevan said, in a shocked voice,
“the lady is now your aunt by marriage.”
“A jest.” Cersei smiled. “Joff did not mean
it.”
“Yes I did,” Joffrey insisted. “He was a
traitor, and I want his stupid head. I’m going to make Sansa
kiss it.”
“No.” Tyrion’s voice was hoarse. “Sansa
is no longer yours to torment. Understand that, monster.”
Joffrey sneered. “You’re the monster,
Uncle.”
“Am I?” Tyrion cocked his head. “Perhaps you
should speak more softly to me, then. Monsters are dangerous
beasts, and just now kings seem to be dying like flies.”
“I could have your tongue out for saying that,” the
boy king said, reddening. “I’m the king.”
Cersei put a protective hand on her son’s shoulder.
“Let the dwarf make all the threats he likes, Joff. I want my
lord father and my uncle to see what he is.”
Lord Tywin ignored that; it was Joffrey he addressed.
“Aerys also felt the need to remind men that he was king. And
he was passing fond of ripping tongues out as well. You could ask
Ser Ilyn Payne about that, though you’ll get no
reply.”
“Ser Ilyn never dared provoke Aerys the way your Imp
provokes Joff,” said Cersei. “You heard him.
‘Monster’ he said. To the King’s Grace. And he threatened him . . . ”
“Be quiet, Cersei. Joffrey, when your enemies defy you,
you must serve them steel and fire. When they go to their knees,
however, you must help them back to their feet. Elsewise no man
will ever bend the knee to you. And any man who must say ‘I
am the king’ is no true king at all. Aerys never understood
that, but you will. When I’ve won your war for you, we will
restore the king’s peace and the king’s justice. The
only head that need concern you is Margaery Tyrell’s
maidenhead.”
Joffrey had that sullen, sulky look he got. Cersei had him
firmly by the shoulder, but perhaps she should have had him by the
throat. The boy surprised them all. Instead of scuttling safely
back under his rock, Joff drew himself up defiantly and said,
“You talk about Aerys, Grandfather, but you were scared of
him.” Oh, my, hasn’t this gotten interesting? Tyrion
thought.
Lord Tywin studied his grandchild in silence, gold flecks
shining in his pale green eyes. “Joffrey, apologize to your
grandfather,” said Cersei.
He wrenched free of her. “Why should I? Everyone knows
it’s true. My father won all the battles. He killed Prince
Rhaegar and took the crown, while your father was hiding under
Casterly Rock. “ The boy gave his grandfather a defiant look.
“A strong king acts boldly, he doesn’t just
talk.”
“Thank you for that wisdom, Your Grace,” Lord Tywin
said, with a courtesy so cold it was like to freeze their ears off.
“Ser Kevan, I can see the king is tired. Please see him
safely back to his bedchamber. Pycelle, perhaps some gentle potion
to help His Grace sleep restfully?”
“Dreamwine, my lord?”
“I don’t want any dreamwine,” Joffrey
insisted.
Lord Tywin would have paid more heed to a mouse squeaking in the
corner. “Dreamwine will serve. Cersei, Tyrion,
remain.”
Ser Kevan took Joffrey firmly by the arm and marched him out the
door, where two of the Kingsguard were waiting. Grand Maester
Pycelle scurried after them as fast as his shaky old legs could
take him. Tyrion remained where he was.
“Father, I am sorry,” Cersei said, when the door was
shut. “Joff has always been willful, I did warn
you . . . ”
“There is a long league’s worth of difference
between willful and stupid. ‘A strong king acts
boldly?’ Who told him that?”
“Not me, I promise you,” said Cersei. “Most
like it was something he heard Robert
say . . . ”
“The part about you hiding under Casterly Rock does sound
like Robert.” Tyrion didn’t want Lord Tywin forgetting
that bit.
“Yes, I recall now,” Cersei said, “Robert
often told Joff that a king must be bold.”
“And what were you telling him, pray? I did not fight a
war to seat Robert the Second on the Iron Throne. You gave me to
understand the boy cared nothing for his father.”
“Why would he? Robert ignored him. He would have beat him
if I’d allowed it. That brute you made me marry once hit the
boy so hard he knocked out two of his baby teeth, over some
mischief with a cat. I told him I’d kill him in his sleep if
he ever did it again, and he never did, but sometimes he would say
things . . . ”
“It appears things needed to be said.” Lord Tywin
waved two fingers at her, a brusque dismissal.
“Go.”
She went, seething.
“Not Robert the Second,” Tyrion said. “Aerys
the Third.”
“The boy is thirteen. There is time yet.” Lord Tywin
paced to the window. That was unlike him; he was more upset than he
wished to show. “He requires a sharp lesson.”
Tyrion had gotten his own sharp lesson at thirteen. He felt
almost sorry for his nephew. On the other hand, no one deserved it
more. “Enough of Joffrey,” he said. “Wars are won
with quills and ravens, wasn’t that what you said? I must
congratulate you. How long have you and Walder Frey been plotting
this?”
“I mislike that word,” Lord Tywin said stiffly.
“And I mislike being left in the dark.”
“There was no reason to tell you. You had no part in
this.”
“Was Cersei told?” Tyrion demanded to know.
“No one was told, save those who had a part to play. And
they were only told as much as they needed to know. You ought to
know that there is no other way to keep a secret—here,
especially. My object was to rid us of a dangerous enemy as cheaply
as I could, not to indulge your curiosity or make your sister feel
important.” He closed the shutters, frowning. “You have
a certain cunning, Tyrion, but the plain truth is you talk too
much. That loose tongue of yours will be your undoing.”
“You should have let Joff tear it out,” suggested
Tyrion.
“You would do well not to tempt me,” Lord Tywin
said. “I’ll hear no more of this. I have been
considering how best to appease Oberyn Martell and his
entourage.”
“Oh? Is this something I’m allowed to know, or
should I leave so you can discuss it with yourself?”
His father ignored the sally. “Prince Oberyn’s
presence here is unfortunate. His brother is a cautious man, a
reasoned man, subtle, deliberate, even indolent to a degree. He is
a man who weighs the consequences of every word and every action.
But Oberyn has always been half-mad.”
“Is it true he tried to raise Dorne for Viserys?”
“No one speaks of it, but yes. Ravens flew and riders
rode, with what secret messages I never knew. Jon Arryn sailed to
Sunspear to return Prince Lewyn’s bones, sat down with Prince
Doran, and ended all the talk of war. But Robert never went to Dorne
thereafter, and Prince Oberyn seldom left it.”
“Well, he’s here now, with half the nobility of Dorne
in his tail, and he grows more impatient every day,” said
Tyrion. “Perhaps I should show him the brothels of
King’s Landing, that might distract him. A tool for every
task, isn’t that how it works? My tool is yours, Father.
Never let it be said that House Lannister blew its trumpets and I
did not respond.”
Lord Tywin’s mouth tightened. “Very droll. Shall I
have them sew you a suit of motley, and a little hat with bells on
it?”
“If I wear it, do I have leave to say anything I want
about His Grace King Joffrey?”
Lord Tywin seated himself again and said, “I was made to
suffer my father’s follies. I will not suffer yours.
Enough.”
“Very well, as you ask so pleasantly. The Red Viper is not
going to be pleasant, I fear . . . nor will he
content himself with Ser Gregor’s head alone.”
“All the more reason not to give it to him.”
“Not to . . . ?” Tyrion was
shocked. “I thought we were agreed that the woods were full
of beasts.”
“Lesser beasts.” Lord Tywin’s fingers laced
together under his chin. “Ser Gregor has served us well. No
other knight in the realm inspires such terror in our
enemies.”
“Oberyn knows that Gregor was the one
who . . . ”
“He knows nothing. He has heard tales. Stable gossip and
kitchen calumnies. He has no crumb of proof. Ser Gregor is
certainly not about to confess to him. I mean to keep him well away
for so long as the Dornishmen are in King’s
Landing.”
“And when Oberyn demands the justice he’s come
for?”
“I will tell him that Ser Amory Lorch killed Elia and her
children,” Lord Tywin said calmly. “So will you, if he
asks.”
“Ser Amory Lorch is dead,” Tyrion said flatly.
“Precisely. Vargo Hoat had Ser Amory torn apart by a bear
after the fall of Harrenhal. That ought to be sufficiently grisly
to appease even Oberyn Martell.”
“You may call that justice . . . ”
“It is justice. It was Ser Amory who brought me the
girl’s body, if you must know. He found her hiding under her
father’s bed, as if she believed Rhaegar could still protect
her. Princess Elia and the babe were in the nursery a floor
below.”
“Well, it’s a tale, and Ser Amory’s not like
to deny it. What will you tell Oberyn when he asks who gave Lorch
his orders?”
“Ser Amory acted on his own in the hope of winning favor
from the new king. Robert’s hatred for Rhaegar was scarcely a
secret.” It might serve, Tyrion had to concede, but the snake will not be
happy. “Far be it from me to question your cunning, Father,
but in your place I do believe I’d have let Robert Baratheon
bloody his own hands.”
Lord Tywin stared at him as if he had lost his wits. “You
deserve that motley, then. We had come late to Robert’s
cause. It was necessary to demonstrate our loyalty. When I laid
those bodies before the throne, no man could doubt that we had
forsaken House Targaryen forever. And Robert’s relief was
palpable. As stupid as he was, even he knew that Rhaegar’s
children had to die if his throne was ever to be secure. Yet he saw
himself as a hero, and heroes do not kill children.” His
father shrugged. “I grant you, it was done too brutally. Elia
need not have been harmed at all, that was sheer folly. By herself
she was nothing.”
“Then why did the Mountain kill her?”
“Because I did not tell him to spare her. I doubt I
mentioned her at all. I had more pressing concerns. Ned
Stark’s van was rushing south from the Trident, and I feared
it might come to swords between us. And it was in Aerys to murder
Jaime, with no more cause than spite. That was the thing I feared
most. That, and what Jaime himself might do.” He closed a
fist. “Nor did I yet grasp what I had in Gregor Clegane, only
that he was huge and terrible in battle. The
rape . . . even you will not accuse me of
giving that command, I would hope. Ser Amory was almost as bestial
with Rhaenys. I asked him afterward why it had required half a
hundred thrusts to kill a girl of . . . two?
Three? He said she’d kicked him and would not stop screaming.
If Lorch had half the wits the gods gave a turnip, he would have
calmed her with a few sweet words and used a soft silk
pillow.” His mouth twisted in distaste. “The blood was
in him.” But not in you, Father. There is no blood in Tywin Lannister.
“Was it a soft silk pillow that slew Robb Stark?”
“It was to be an arrow, at Edmure Tully’s wedding
feast. The boy was too wary in the field. He kept his men in good
order, and surrounded himself with outriders and
bodyguards.”
“So Lord Walder slew him under his own roof, at his own
table?” Tyrion made a fist. “What of Lady
Catelyn?”
“Slain as well, I’d say. A pair of wolfskins. Frey had
intended to keep her captive, but perhaps something went
awry.”
“So much for guest right.”
“The blood is on Walder Frey’s hands, not
mine.”
“Walder Frey is a peevish old man who lives to fondle his
young wife and brood over all the slights he’s suffered. I
have no doubt he hatched this ugly chicken, but he would never have
dared such a thing without a promise of protection.”
“I suppose you would have spared the boy and told Lord
Frey you had no need of his allegiance? That would have driven the
old fool right back into Stark’s arms and won you another
year of war. Explain to me why it is more noble to kill ten
thousand men in battle than a dozen at dinner.” When Tyrion
had no reply to that, his father continued. “The price was
cheap by any measure. The crown shall grant Riverrun to Ser Emmon
Frey once the Blackfish yields. Lancel and Daven must marry Frey
girls, Joy is to wed one of Lord Walder’s natural sons when
she’s old enough, and Roose Bolton becomes Warden of the
North and takes home Arya Stark.”
“Arya Stark?” Tyrion cocked his head. “And
Bolton? I might have known Frey would not have the stomach to act
alone. But Arya . . . Varys and Ser Jacelyn
searched for her for more than half a year. Arya Stark is surely
dead.”
“So was Renly, until the Blackwater.”
“What does that mean?”
“Perhaps Littlefinger succeeded where you and Varys
failed. Lord Bolton will wed the girl to his bastard son. We shall allow the
Dreadfort to fight the ironborn for a few years, and see if he can
bring Stark’s other bannermen to heel. Come spring, all of
them should be at the end of their strength and ready to bend the
knee. The north will go to your son by Sansa
Stark . . . if you ever find enough manhood in
you to breed one. Lest you forget, it is not only Joffrey who must
needs take a maidenhead.” I had not forgotten, though I’d hoped you had. “And
when do you imagine Sansa will be at her most fertile?”
Tyrion asked his father in tones that dripped acid. “Before
or after I tell her how we murdered her mother and her
brother?”
They supped alone, as they did so often.
“The pease are
overcooked,” his wife ventured once.
“No matter,”
he said. “So is the mutton.”
It was a jest, but Sansa took it for criticism. “I am
sorry, my lord.”
“Why? Some cook should be sorry. Not you. The pease are
not your province, Sansa.”
“I . . . I am sorry that my lord
husband is displeased.”
“Any displeasure I’m feeling has naught to do with
pease. I have Joffrey and my sister to displease me, and my lord
father, and three hundred bloody Dornishmen.” He had settled
Prince Oberyn and his lords in a cornerfort facing the city, as far
from the Tyrells as he could put them without evicting them from
the Red Keep entirely. It was not nearly far enough. Already there
had been a brawl in a Flea Bottom pot-shop that left one Tyrell
man-at-arms dead and two of Lord Gargalen’s scalded, and an
ugly confrontation in the yard when Mace Tyrell’s wizened
little mother called Ellaria Sand “the serpent’s
whore.” Every time he chanced to see Oberyn Martell the
prince asked when the justice would be served. Overcooked pease
were the least of Tyrion’s troubles, but he saw no point in
burdening his young wife with any of that. Sansa had enough griefs
of her own.
“The pease suffice,” he told her curtly. “They
are green and round, what more can one expect of pease? Here,
I’ll have another serving, if it please my lady.” He
beckoned, and Podrick Payne spooned so many pease onto his plate
that Tyrion lost sight of his mutton. That was stupid, he told
himself. Now I have to eat them all, or she’ll be sorry all
over again.
The supper ended in a strained silence, as so many of their
suppers did. Afterward, as Pod was removing the cups and platters,
Sansa asked Tyrion for leave to visit the godswood.
“As you wish.” He had become accustomed to his
wife’s nightly devotions. She prayed at the royal sept as
well, and often lit candles to Mother, Maid, and Crone. Tyrion
found all this piety excessive, if truth be told, but in her place
he might want the help of the gods as well. “I confess, I
know little of the old gods,” he said, trying to be pleasant.
“Perhaps someday you might enlighten me. I could even
accompany you.”
“No,” Sansa said at once.
“You . . . you are kind to offer,
but . . . there are no devotions, my lord. No
priests or songs or candles. Only trees, and silent prayer. You
would be bored.”
“No doubt you’re right.” She knows me better
than I thought. “Though the sound of rustling leaves might be
a pleasant change from some septon droning on about the seven
aspects of grace.” Tyrion waved her off. “I won’t
intrude. Dress warmly, my lady, the wind is brisk out there.”
He was tempted to ask what she prayed for, but Sansa was so dutiful
she might actually tell him, and he didn’t think he wanted to
know.
He went back to work after she left, trying to track some golden
dragons through the labyrinth of Littlefinger’s ledgers.
Petyr Baelish had not believed in letting gold sit about and grow
dusty, that was for certain, but the more Tyrion tried to make
sense of his accounts the more his head hurt. It was all very well
to talk of breeding dragons instead of locking them up in the
treasury, but some of these ventures smelled worse than week-old
fish. I wouldn’t have been so quick to let Joffrey fling the
Antler Men over the walls if I’d known how many of the bloody
bastards had taken loans from the crown. He would have to send
Bronn to find their heirs, but he feared that would prove as
fruitful as trying to squeeze silver from a silverfish.
When the summons from his lord father arrived, it was the first
time Tyrion could ever recall being pleased to see Ser Boros
Blount. He closed the ledgers gratefully, blew out the oil lamp,
tied a cloak around his shoulders, and waddled across the castle to
the Tower of the Hand. The wind was brisk, just as he’d
warned Sansa, and there was a smell of rain in the air. Perhaps
when Lord Tywin was done with him he should go to the godswood and
fetch her home before she got soaked.
But all that went straight out of his head when he entered the
Hand’s solar to find Cersei, Ser Kevan, and Grand Maester
Pycelle gathered about Lord Tywin and the king. Joffrey was almost
bouncing, and Cersei was savoring a smug little smile, though Lord
Tywin looked as grim as ever. I wonder if he could smile even if he
wanted to. “What’s happened?” Tyrion asked.
His father offered him a roll of parchment. Someone had
flattened it, but it still wanted to curl. “Roslin caught a
fine fat trout,” the message read. “Her brothers gave
her a pair of wolf pelts for her wedding.” Tyrion turned it
over to inspect the broken seal. The wax was silvery-grey, and
pressed into it were the twin towers of House Frey. “Does the
Lord of the Crossing imagine he’s being poetic? Or is this
meant to confound us?” Tyrion snorted. “The trout
would be Edmure Tully, the
pelts . . . ”
“He’s dead!” Joffrey sounded so proud and
happy you might have thought he’d skinned Robb Stark
himself. First Greyjoy and now Stark. Tyrion thought of his child wife,
praying in the godswood even now. Praying to her father’s
gods to bring her brother victory and keep her mother safe, no
doubt. The old gods paid no more heed to prayer than the new ones,
it would seem. Perhaps he should take comfort in that. “Kings
are falling like leaves this autumn,” he said. “It
would seem our little war is winning itself.”
“Wars do not win themselves, Tyrion,” Cersei said
with poisonous sweetness. “Our lord father won this
war.”
“Nothing is won so long as we have enemies in the
field,” Lord Tywin warned them.
“The river lords are no fools,” the queen argued.
“Without the northmen they cannot hope to stand against the
combined power of Highgarden, Casterly Rock, and Dorne. Surely they
will choose submission rather than destruction.”
“Most,” agreed Lord Tywin. “Riverrun remains,
but so long as Walder Frey holds Edmure Tully hostage, the
Blackfish dare not mount a threat. Jason Mallister and Tytos
Blackwood will fight on for honor’s sake, but the Freys can
keep the Mallisters penned up at Seagard, and with the right
inducement Jonos Bracken can be persuaded to change his allegiance
and attack the Blackwoods. In the end they will bend the knee, yes.
I mean to offer generous terms. Any castle that yields to us will
be spared, save one.”
“Harrenhal?” said Tyrion, who knew his sire.
“The realm is best rid of these Brave Companions. I have
commanded Ser Gregor to put the castle to the sword.” Gregor Clegane. It appeared as if his lord father meant to mine
the Mountain for every last nugget of ore before turning him over
to Dornish justice. The Brave Companions would end as heads on
spikes, and Littlefinger would stroll into Harrenhal without so
much as a spot of blood on those fine clothes of his. He wondered
if Petyr Baelish had reached the Vale yet. If the gods are good, he
ran into a storm at sea and sank. But when had the gods ever been
especially good?
“They should all be put to the sword,” Joffrey
declared suddenly. “The Mallisters and Blackwoods and
Brackens . . . all of them. They’re
traitors. I want them killed, Grandfather. I won’t have any generous
terms.” The king turned to Grand Maester Pycelle. “And
I want Robb Stark’s head too. Write to Lord Frey and tell
him. The king commands. I’m going to have it served to Sansa
at my wedding feast.”
“Sire,” Ser Kevan said, in a shocked voice,
“the lady is now your aunt by marriage.”
“A jest.” Cersei smiled. “Joff did not mean
it.”
“Yes I did,” Joffrey insisted. “He was a
traitor, and I want his stupid head. I’m going to make Sansa
kiss it.”
“No.” Tyrion’s voice was hoarse. “Sansa
is no longer yours to torment. Understand that, monster.”
Joffrey sneered. “You’re the monster,
Uncle.”
“Am I?” Tyrion cocked his head. “Perhaps you
should speak more softly to me, then. Monsters are dangerous
beasts, and just now kings seem to be dying like flies.”
“I could have your tongue out for saying that,” the
boy king said, reddening. “I’m the king.”
Cersei put a protective hand on her son’s shoulder.
“Let the dwarf make all the threats he likes, Joff. I want my
lord father and my uncle to see what he is.”
Lord Tywin ignored that; it was Joffrey he addressed.
“Aerys also felt the need to remind men that he was king. And
he was passing fond of ripping tongues out as well. You could ask
Ser Ilyn Payne about that, though you’ll get no
reply.”
“Ser Ilyn never dared provoke Aerys the way your Imp
provokes Joff,” said Cersei. “You heard him.
‘Monster’ he said. To the King’s Grace. And he threatened him . . . ”
“Be quiet, Cersei. Joffrey, when your enemies defy you,
you must serve them steel and fire. When they go to their knees,
however, you must help them back to their feet. Elsewise no man
will ever bend the knee to you. And any man who must say ‘I
am the king’ is no true king at all. Aerys never understood
that, but you will. When I’ve won your war for you, we will
restore the king’s peace and the king’s justice. The
only head that need concern you is Margaery Tyrell’s
maidenhead.”
Joffrey had that sullen, sulky look he got. Cersei had him
firmly by the shoulder, but perhaps she should have had him by the
throat. The boy surprised them all. Instead of scuttling safely
back under his rock, Joff drew himself up defiantly and said,
“You talk about Aerys, Grandfather, but you were scared of
him.” Oh, my, hasn’t this gotten interesting? Tyrion
thought.
Lord Tywin studied his grandchild in silence, gold flecks
shining in his pale green eyes. “Joffrey, apologize to your
grandfather,” said Cersei.
He wrenched free of her. “Why should I? Everyone knows
it’s true. My father won all the battles. He killed Prince
Rhaegar and took the crown, while your father was hiding under
Casterly Rock. “ The boy gave his grandfather a defiant look.
“A strong king acts boldly, he doesn’t just
talk.”
“Thank you for that wisdom, Your Grace,” Lord Tywin
said, with a courtesy so cold it was like to freeze their ears off.
“Ser Kevan, I can see the king is tired. Please see him
safely back to his bedchamber. Pycelle, perhaps some gentle potion
to help His Grace sleep restfully?”
“Dreamwine, my lord?”
“I don’t want any dreamwine,” Joffrey
insisted.
Lord Tywin would have paid more heed to a mouse squeaking in the
corner. “Dreamwine will serve. Cersei, Tyrion,
remain.”
Ser Kevan took Joffrey firmly by the arm and marched him out the
door, where two of the Kingsguard were waiting. Grand Maester
Pycelle scurried after them as fast as his shaky old legs could
take him. Tyrion remained where he was.
“Father, I am sorry,” Cersei said, when the door was
shut. “Joff has always been willful, I did warn
you . . . ”
“There is a long league’s worth of difference
between willful and stupid. ‘A strong king acts
boldly?’ Who told him that?”
“Not me, I promise you,” said Cersei. “Most
like it was something he heard Robert
say . . . ”
“The part about you hiding under Casterly Rock does sound
like Robert.” Tyrion didn’t want Lord Tywin forgetting
that bit.
“Yes, I recall now,” Cersei said, “Robert
often told Joff that a king must be bold.”
“And what were you telling him, pray? I did not fight a
war to seat Robert the Second on the Iron Throne. You gave me to
understand the boy cared nothing for his father.”
“Why would he? Robert ignored him. He would have beat him
if I’d allowed it. That brute you made me marry once hit the
boy so hard he knocked out two of his baby teeth, over some
mischief with a cat. I told him I’d kill him in his sleep if
he ever did it again, and he never did, but sometimes he would say
things . . . ”
“It appears things needed to be said.” Lord Tywin
waved two fingers at her, a brusque dismissal.
“Go.”
She went, seething.
“Not Robert the Second,” Tyrion said. “Aerys
the Third.”
“The boy is thirteen. There is time yet.” Lord Tywin
paced to the window. That was unlike him; he was more upset than he
wished to show. “He requires a sharp lesson.”
Tyrion had gotten his own sharp lesson at thirteen. He felt
almost sorry for his nephew. On the other hand, no one deserved it
more. “Enough of Joffrey,” he said. “Wars are won
with quills and ravens, wasn’t that what you said? I must
congratulate you. How long have you and Walder Frey been plotting
this?”
“I mislike that word,” Lord Tywin said stiffly.
“And I mislike being left in the dark.”
“There was no reason to tell you. You had no part in
this.”
“Was Cersei told?” Tyrion demanded to know.
“No one was told, save those who had a part to play. And
they were only told as much as they needed to know. You ought to
know that there is no other way to keep a secret—here,
especially. My object was to rid us of a dangerous enemy as cheaply
as I could, not to indulge your curiosity or make your sister feel
important.” He closed the shutters, frowning. “You have
a certain cunning, Tyrion, but the plain truth is you talk too
much. That loose tongue of yours will be your undoing.”
“You should have let Joff tear it out,” suggested
Tyrion.
“You would do well not to tempt me,” Lord Tywin
said. “I’ll hear no more of this. I have been
considering how best to appease Oberyn Martell and his
entourage.”
“Oh? Is this something I’m allowed to know, or
should I leave so you can discuss it with yourself?”
His father ignored the sally. “Prince Oberyn’s
presence here is unfortunate. His brother is a cautious man, a
reasoned man, subtle, deliberate, even indolent to a degree. He is
a man who weighs the consequences of every word and every action.
But Oberyn has always been half-mad.”
“Is it true he tried to raise Dorne for Viserys?”
“No one speaks of it, but yes. Ravens flew and riders
rode, with what secret messages I never knew. Jon Arryn sailed to
Sunspear to return Prince Lewyn’s bones, sat down with Prince
Doran, and ended all the talk of war. But Robert never went to Dorne
thereafter, and Prince Oberyn seldom left it.”
“Well, he’s here now, with half the nobility of Dorne
in his tail, and he grows more impatient every day,” said
Tyrion. “Perhaps I should show him the brothels of
King’s Landing, that might distract him. A tool for every
task, isn’t that how it works? My tool is yours, Father.
Never let it be said that House Lannister blew its trumpets and I
did not respond.”
Lord Tywin’s mouth tightened. “Very droll. Shall I
have them sew you a suit of motley, and a little hat with bells on
it?”
“If I wear it, do I have leave to say anything I want
about His Grace King Joffrey?”
Lord Tywin seated himself again and said, “I was made to
suffer my father’s follies. I will not suffer yours.
Enough.”
“Very well, as you ask so pleasantly. The Red Viper is not
going to be pleasant, I fear . . . nor will he
content himself with Ser Gregor’s head alone.”
“All the more reason not to give it to him.”
“Not to . . . ?” Tyrion was
shocked. “I thought we were agreed that the woods were full
of beasts.”
“Lesser beasts.” Lord Tywin’s fingers laced
together under his chin. “Ser Gregor has served us well. No
other knight in the realm inspires such terror in our
enemies.”
“Oberyn knows that Gregor was the one
who . . . ”
“He knows nothing. He has heard tales. Stable gossip and
kitchen calumnies. He has no crumb of proof. Ser Gregor is
certainly not about to confess to him. I mean to keep him well away
for so long as the Dornishmen are in King’s
Landing.”
“And when Oberyn demands the justice he’s come
for?”
“I will tell him that Ser Amory Lorch killed Elia and her
children,” Lord Tywin said calmly. “So will you, if he
asks.”
“Ser Amory Lorch is dead,” Tyrion said flatly.
“Precisely. Vargo Hoat had Ser Amory torn apart by a bear
after the fall of Harrenhal. That ought to be sufficiently grisly
to appease even Oberyn Martell.”
“You may call that justice . . . ”
“It is justice. It was Ser Amory who brought me the
girl’s body, if you must know. He found her hiding under her
father’s bed, as if she believed Rhaegar could still protect
her. Princess Elia and the babe were in the nursery a floor
below.”
“Well, it’s a tale, and Ser Amory’s not like
to deny it. What will you tell Oberyn when he asks who gave Lorch
his orders?”
“Ser Amory acted on his own in the hope of winning favor
from the new king. Robert’s hatred for Rhaegar was scarcely a
secret.” It might serve, Tyrion had to concede, but the snake will not be
happy. “Far be it from me to question your cunning, Father,
but in your place I do believe I’d have let Robert Baratheon
bloody his own hands.”
Lord Tywin stared at him as if he had lost his wits. “You
deserve that motley, then. We had come late to Robert’s
cause. It was necessary to demonstrate our loyalty. When I laid
those bodies before the throne, no man could doubt that we had
forsaken House Targaryen forever. And Robert’s relief was
palpable. As stupid as he was, even he knew that Rhaegar’s
children had to die if his throne was ever to be secure. Yet he saw
himself as a hero, and heroes do not kill children.” His
father shrugged. “I grant you, it was done too brutally. Elia
need not have been harmed at all, that was sheer folly. By herself
she was nothing.”
“Then why did the Mountain kill her?”
“Because I did not tell him to spare her. I doubt I
mentioned her at all. I had more pressing concerns. Ned
Stark’s van was rushing south from the Trident, and I feared
it might come to swords between us. And it was in Aerys to murder
Jaime, with no more cause than spite. That was the thing I feared
most. That, and what Jaime himself might do.” He closed a
fist. “Nor did I yet grasp what I had in Gregor Clegane, only
that he was huge and terrible in battle. The
rape . . . even you will not accuse me of
giving that command, I would hope. Ser Amory was almost as bestial
with Rhaenys. I asked him afterward why it had required half a
hundred thrusts to kill a girl of . . . two?
Three? He said she’d kicked him and would not stop screaming.
If Lorch had half the wits the gods gave a turnip, he would have
calmed her with a few sweet words and used a soft silk
pillow.” His mouth twisted in distaste. “The blood was
in him.” But not in you, Father. There is no blood in Tywin Lannister.
“Was it a soft silk pillow that slew Robb Stark?”
“It was to be an arrow, at Edmure Tully’s wedding
feast. The boy was too wary in the field. He kept his men in good
order, and surrounded himself with outriders and
bodyguards.”
“So Lord Walder slew him under his own roof, at his own
table?” Tyrion made a fist. “What of Lady
Catelyn?”
“Slain as well, I’d say. A pair of wolfskins. Frey had
intended to keep her captive, but perhaps something went
awry.”
“So much for guest right.”
“The blood is on Walder Frey’s hands, not
mine.”
“Walder Frey is a peevish old man who lives to fondle his
young wife and brood over all the slights he’s suffered. I
have no doubt he hatched this ugly chicken, but he would never have
dared such a thing without a promise of protection.”
“I suppose you would have spared the boy and told Lord
Frey you had no need of his allegiance? That would have driven the
old fool right back into Stark’s arms and won you another
year of war. Explain to me why it is more noble to kill ten
thousand men in battle than a dozen at dinner.” When Tyrion
had no reply to that, his father continued. “The price was
cheap by any measure. The crown shall grant Riverrun to Ser Emmon
Frey once the Blackfish yields. Lancel and Daven must marry Frey
girls, Joy is to wed one of Lord Walder’s natural sons when
she’s old enough, and Roose Bolton becomes Warden of the
North and takes home Arya Stark.”
“Arya Stark?” Tyrion cocked his head. “And
Bolton? I might have known Frey would not have the stomach to act
alone. But Arya . . . Varys and Ser Jacelyn
searched for her for more than half a year. Arya Stark is surely
dead.”
“So was Renly, until the Blackwater.”
“What does that mean?”
“Perhaps Littlefinger succeeded where you and Varys
failed. Lord Bolton will wed the girl to his bastard son. We shall allow the
Dreadfort to fight the ironborn for a few years, and see if he can
bring Stark’s other bannermen to heel. Come spring, all of
them should be at the end of their strength and ready to bend the
knee. The north will go to your son by Sansa
Stark . . . if you ever find enough manhood in
you to breed one. Lest you forget, it is not only Joffrey who must
needs take a maidenhead.” I had not forgotten, though I’d hoped you had. “And
when do you imagine Sansa will be at her most fertile?”
Tyrion asked his father in tones that dripped acid. “Before
or after I tell her how we murdered her mother and her
brother?”