A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
had seen him somewhere else as well, but where?
By the time Brienne found the Seven Swords again, the common room was crowded. Four septas sat closest to the fire, in robes stained and dusty from the road. Elsewhere locals filled the benches, sopping up bowls of hot crab stew with chunks of bread. The smell made her stomach rumble, but she saw no empty seats. Then a voice behind her said, âMâlady, here, have my place.â Not until he hopped off the bench did Brienne realize that the speaker was a dwarf. The little man was not quite five feet tall. His nose was veined and bulbous, his teeth red from sourleaf, and he was dressed in the brown roughspun robes of a holy brother, with the iron hammer of the Smith dangling down about his thick neck.
âKeep your seat,â she said. âI can stand as well as you.â
âAye, but my head is not so apt to knock upon the ceiling.â The dwarfâs speech was coarse but courteous. Brienne could see the crown of his scalp where he had shaved it. Many holy brothers wore such tonsures. Septa Roelle once told her that it was meant to show that they had nothing to hide from the Father. âCanât the Father see through hair?â Brienne had asked.
A stupid thing to say.
She had been a slow child; Septa Roelle often told her so. She felt near as stupid now, so she took the little manâs place at the end of the bench, signaled for stew, and turned to thank the dwarf. âDo you serve some holy house in Duskendale, brother?â
ââTwas nearer Maidenpool, mâlady, but the wolves burned us out,â the man replied, gnawing on a heel of bread. âWe rebuilt as best we could, until some sellswords come. I could not say whose men they were, but they took our pigs and killed the brothers. I squeezed inside a hollow log and hid, but tâothers were too big. It took me a long time to bury them all, but the Smith, he gave me strength. When that was done I dug up a few coins the elder brother had hid by and set off by myself.â
âI met some other brothers going to Kingâs Landing.â
âAye, thereâs hundreds on the roads. Not only brothers. Septons too, and smallfolk. Sparrows all. Might be Iâm a sparrow too. The Smith, he made me small enough.â He chuckled. âAnd whatâs your sad tale, mâlady?â
âI am looking for my sister. Sheâs highborn, only three-and-ten, a pretty maid with blue eyes and auburn hair. You may have seen her traveling with a man. A knight, perhaps a fool. Thereâs gold for the man who helps me find her.â
âGold?â The brother gave her a red smile. âA bowl of that crab stew would be enough reward for me, but I fear I cannot help you. Fools Iâve met, and plenty, but not so many pretty maids.â He cocked his head and thought a moment. âThere was a fool at Maidenpool, now that I think of it. He was clad in rags and dirt, as near as I could tell, but under the dirt was motley.â
Did Dontos Hollard wear motley?
No one had told Brienne that he did . . . but no one had ever said he didnât, either. Why would the man be in rags, though? Had some misfortune overtaken him and Sansa after they fled Kingâs Landing? That could well be, with the roads so dangerous.
It might not have been him at all.
âDid this fool have a red nose, full of broken veins?â
âI could not swear to that. I confess, I paid him little heed. Iâd gone to Maidenpool after burying my brothers, thinking that I might find a ship to take me to Kingâs Landing. I first glimpsed the fool down by the docks. He had a furtive air to him and took care to avoid Lord Tarlyâs soldiers. Later, I encountered him again, at the Stinking Goose.â
âThe Stinking Goose?â she said, uncertain.
âAn unsavory place,â the dwarf admitted. âLord Tarlyâs men patrol the port at Maidenpool, but the Goose is always full of sailors, and sailors have been known to smuggle men aboard their ships, if the price is right. This fool was seeking passage for three across the narrow sea. I oft saw him there, talking with oarsmen off the galleys. Sometimes he would sing a funny song.â
âSeeking passage for
three?
Not two?â
âThree, mâlady. That Iâd swear to, by the Seven.â
Three,
she thought.
Sansa, Ser Dontos . . . but who would be the third? The Imp? â
Did the fool find his
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