A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
âbut itâs bloody well gone, Iâd say. No telling how long heâs been here.â
By the time they found themselves in the foothills of the Mountains of the Moon, the rains had mostly stopped. Arya could see the sun and moon and stars, and it seemed to her that they were heading eastward. âWhere are we going?â she asked again.
This time the Hound answered her. âYou have an aunt in the Eyrie. Might be sheâll want to ransom your scrawny arse, though the gods know why. Once we find the high road, we can follow it all the way to the Bloody Gate.â
Aunt Lysa
. The thought left Arya feeling empty. It was her mother she wanted, not her motherâs sister. She didnât know her motherâs sister any more than she knew her great uncle Blackfish.
We should have gone into the castle
. They didnât really
know
that her mother was dead, or Robb either. It wasnât like theyâd seen them die or anything. Maybe Lord Frey had just taken them captive. Maybe they were chained up in his dungeon, or maybe the Freys were taking them to Kingâs Landing so Joffrey could chop their heads off. They didnât
know
. âWe should go back,â she suddenly decided. âWe should go back to the Twins and get my mother. She canât be dead. We have to help her.â
âI thought your sister was the one with a head full of songs,â the Hound growled. âFrey might have kept your mother alive to ransom, thatâs true. But thereâs no way in seven hells Iâm going to pluck her out of his castle all by my bloody self.â
âNot by yourself. Iâd come too.â
He made a sound that was almost a laugh. â
That
will scare the piss out of the old man.â
âYouâre just afraid to die!â she said scornfully.
Now Clegane
did
laugh. âDeath donât scare me. Only fire. Now be quiet, or Iâll cut your tongue out myself and save the silent sisters the bother. Itâs the Vale for us.â
Arya didnât think heâd
really
cut her tongue out; he was just saying that the way Pinkeye used to say heâd beat her bloody. All the same, she wasnât going to try him. Sandor Clegane was no Pinkeye. Pinkeye didnât cut people in half or hit them with axes. Not even with the flat of axes.
That night she went to sleep thinking of her mother, and wondering if she should kill the Hound in his sleep and rescue Lady Catelyn herself. When she closed her eyes she saw her motherâs face against the back of her eyelids.
Sheâs so close I could almost smell her
. . .
. . . and then she
could
smell her. The scent was faint beneath the other smells, beneath moss and mud and water, and the stench of rotting reeds and rotting men. She padded slowly through the soft ground to the riverâs edge, lapped up a drink, the lifted her head to sniff. The sky was grey and thick with cloud, the river green and full of floating things. Dead men clogged the shallows, some still moving as the water pushed them, others washed up on the banks. Her brothers and sisters swarmed around them, tearing at the rich ripe flesh.
The crows were there too, screaming at the wolves and filling the air with feathers. Their blood was hotter, and one of her sisters had snapped at one as it took flight and caught it by the wing. It made her want a crow herself. She wanted to taste the blood, to hear the bones crunch between her teeth, to fill her belly with warm flesh instead of cold. She was hungry and the meat was all around, but she knew she could not eat.
The scent was stronger now. She pricked her ears up and listened to the grumbles of her pack, the shriek of angry crows, the whirr of wings and sound of running water. Somewhere far off she could hear horses and the calls of living men, but they were not what mattered. Only the scent mattered. She sniffed the air again. There it was, and now she saw it too, something pale and white drifting down the river, turning where it brushed against a snag. The reeds bowed down before it.
She splashed noisily through the shallows and threw herself into the deeper water, her legs churning. The current was strong but she was stronger. She swam, following her nose. The river smells were rich and wet, but those were not the smells that pulled her. She paddled after the sharp red whisper of cold blood, the sweet cloying stench of death. She chased them as she had often chased a red deer through
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