A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
temple.
Once more around the hill, and there I am
. When the message had come in and he had stepped forward to offer to carry the ransom, his father had squinted down and said, â
You
, Merrett?â and started laughing through his nose, that hideous
heh heh heh
laugh of his. Merrett practically had to beg before theyâd give him the bloody bag of gold.
Something moved in the underbrush along the side of the road. Merrett reined up hard and reached for his sword, but it was only a squirrel. âStupid,â he told himself, shoving the sword back in its scabbard without ever having gotten it out. âOutlaws donât have tails. Bloody hell, Merrett, get hold of yourself.â His heart was thumping in his chest as if he were some green boy on his first campaign.
As if this were the kingswood and it was the old Brotherhood I was going to face, not the lightning lordâs sorry lot of brigands
. For a moment he was tempted to trot right back down the hill and find the nearest alehouse. That bag of gold would buy a lot of ale, enough for him to forget all about Petyr Pimple.
Let them hang him, he brought this on himself. Itâs no more than he deserves, wandering off with some bloody camp follower like a stag in rut
.
His head had begun to pound; soft now, but he knew it would get worse. Merrett rubbed the bridge of his nose. He really had no right to think so ill of Petyr.
I did the same myself when I was his age
. In his case all it got him was a pox, but still, he shouldnât condemn. Whores did have charms, especially if you had a face like Petyrâs. The poor lad had a wife, to be sure, but she was half the problem. Not only was she twice his age, but she was bedding his brother Walder too, if the talk was true. There was always lots of talk around the Twins, and only a little was ever true, but in this case Merrett believed it. Black Walder was a man who took what he wanted, even his brotherâs wife. Heâd had Edwynâs wife too, that was common knowledge, Fair Walda had been known to slip into his bed from time to time, and some even said heâd known the seventh Lady Frey a deal better than he should have. Small wonder he refused to marry. Why buy a cow when there were udders all around begging to be milked?
Cursing under his breath, Merrett jammed his heels into his horseâs flanks and rode on up the hill. As tempting as it was to drink the gold away, he knew that if he didnât come back with Petyr Pimple, he had as well not come back at all.
Lord Walder would soon turn two-and-ninety. His ears had started to go, his eyes were almost gone, and his gout was so bad that he had to be carried everywhere. He could not possibly last much longer, all his sons agreed.
And when he goes, everything will change, and not for the better
. His father was querulous and stubborn, with an iron will and a waspâs tongue, but he did believe in taking care of his own.
All
of his own, even the ones who had displeased and disappointed him.
Even the ones whose names he canât remember
. Once he was gone, though . . .
When Ser Stevron had been heir, that was one thing. The old man had been grooming Stevron for sixty years, and had pounded it into his head that blood was blood. But Stevron had died whilst campaigning with the Young Wolf in the westââof waiting, no doubt,â Lame Lothar had quipped when the raven brought them the newsâand his sons and grandsons were a different sort of Frey. Stevronâs son Ser Ryman stood to inherit now; a thick-witted, stubborn, greedy man. And after Ryman came his own sons, Edwyn and Black Walder, who were even worse. âFortunately,â Lame Lothar once said, âthey hate each other even more than they hate us.â
Merrett wasnât certain that was fortunate at all, and for that matter Lothar himself might be more dangerous than either of them. Lord Walder had ordered the slaughter of the Starks at Roslinâs wedding, but it had been Lame Lothar who had plotted it out with Roose Bolton, all the way down to which songs would be played. Lothar was a very amusing fellow to get drunk with, but Merrett would never be so foolish as to turn his back on him. In the Twins, you learned early that only full blood siblings could be trusted, and them not very far.
It was like to be every son for himself when the old man died, and every daughter as well. The new Lord of the Crossing would doubtless keep
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