A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
pushed back from the bench and got to his feet, the fearsomely strong cider all went to his head at once. He had to put a hand on the table to steady himself. âLeave Rosey be,â he said, by way of parting. âJust leave her be, or I may kill you.â
Leo Tyrell flicked the hair back from his eye. âI do not fight duels with pig boys. Go away.â
Pate turned and crossed the terrace. His heels rang against the weathered planks of the old bridge. By the time he reached the other side, the eastern sky was turning pink.
The world is wide,
he told himself.
If I bought that donkey, I could still wander the roads and byways of the Seven Kingdoms, leeching the smallfolk and picking nits out of their hair. I could sign on to some ship, pull an oar, and sail to Qarth by the Jade Gates to see these bloody dragons for myself. I do not need to go back to old Walgrave and the ravens.
Yet somehow his feet turned back toward the Citadel.
When the first shaft of sunlight broke through the clouds to the east, morning bells began to peal from the Sailorâs Sept down by the harbor. The Lordâs Sept joined in a moment later, then the Seven Shrines from their gardens across the Honeywine, and finally the Starry Sept that had been the seat of the High Septon for a thousand years before Aegon landed at Kingâs Landing. They made a mighty music.
Though not so sweet as one small nightingale.
He could hear singing too, beneath the pealing of the bells. Each morning at first light the red priests gathered to welcome the sun outside their modest wharfside temple.
For the night is dark and full of terrors.
Pate had heard them cry those words a hundred times, asking their god Râhllor to save them from the darkness. The Seven were gods enough for him, but he had heard that Stannis Baratheon worshiped at the nightfires now. He had even put the fiery heart of Râhllor on his banners in place of the crowned stag.
If he should win the Iron Throne, weâll all need to learn the words of the red priestsâ song,
Pate thought, but that was not likely. Tywin Lannister had smashed Stannis and Râhllor upon the Blackwater, and soon enough he would finish them and mount the head of the Baratheon pretender on a spike above the gates of Kingâs Landing.
As the nightâs mists burned away, Oldtown took form around him, emerging ghostlike from the predawn gloom. Pate had never seen Kingâs Landing, but he knew it was a daub-and-wattle city, a sprawl of mud streets, thatched roofs, and wooden hovels. Oldtown was built in stone, and all its streets were cobbled, down to the meanest alley. The city was never more beautiful than at break of day. West of the Honeywine, the Guildhalls lined the bank like a row of palaces. Upriver, the domes and towers of the Citadel rose on both sides of the river, connected by stone bridges crowded with halls and houses. Downstream, below the black marble walls and arched windows of the Starry Sept, the manses of the pious clustered like children gathered round the feet of an old dowager.
And beyond, where the Honeywine widened into Whispering Sound, rose the Hightower, its beacon fires bright against the dawn. From where it stood atop the bluffs of Battle Island, its shadow cut the city like a sword. Those born and raised in Oldtown could tell the time of day by where that shadow fell. Some claimed a man could see all the way to the Wall from the top. Perhaps that was why Lord Leyton had not made the descent in more than a decade, preferring to rule his city from the clouds.
A butcherâs cart rumbled past Pate down the river road, five piglets in the back squealing in distress. Dodging from its path, he just avoided being spattered as a townswoman emptied a pail of night soil from a window overhead.
When I am a maester in a castle I will have a horse to ride,
he thought. Then he tripped upon a cobble and wondered who he was fooling. There would be no chain for him, no seat at a lordâs high table, no tall white horse to ride. His days would be spent listening to ravens
quork
and scrubbing shit stains off Archmaester Walgraveâs smallclothes.
He was on one knee, trying to wipe the mud off his robes, when a voice said, âGood morrow, Pate.â
The alchemist was standing over him.
Pate rose. âThe third day . . . you said you would be at the Quill and Tankard.â
âYou were with your friends. It was not my wish to intrude upon your
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