A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
you have to tell.
Lies had been all that kept her alive in Kingâs Landing. If she had not lied to Joffrey, his Kingsguard would have beat her bloody.
After âAlysanneâ the singer stopped again, long enough for Sansa to snatch an hourâs rest. But as the first light of dawn was prying at her shutters, she heard the soft strains of âOn a Misty Mornâ drifting up from below, and woke at once. That was more properly a womanâs song, a lament sung by a mother on the dawn after some terrible battle, as she searches amongst the dead for the body of her only son.
The mother sings her grief for her dead son,
Sansa thought,
but Marillion grieves for his fingers, for his eyes.
The words rose like arrows and pierced her in the darkness.
Oh, have you seen my boy, good ser?
His hair is chestnut brown
He promised heâd come back to me
Our homeâs in Wendish Town.
Sansa covered her ears with a goose down pillow to shut out the rest of it, but it was no good. Day had come and she had woken, and Lord Nestor Royce was coming up the mountain.
The High Steward and his party reached the Eyrie in the late afternoon, with the valley gold and red beneath them and the wind rising. He brought his son Ser Albar, along with a dozen knights and a score of men-at-arms.
So many strangers.
Sansa looked at their faces anxiously, wondering if they were friends or foes.
Petyr welcomed his visitors in a black velvet doublet with grey sleeves that matched his woolen breeches and lent a certain darkness to his grey-green eyes. Maester Colemon stood beside him, his chain of many metals hanging loose about his long, skinny neck. Although the maester was much the taller of the two men, it was the Lord Protector who drew the eye. He had put away his smiles for the day, it seemed. He listened solemnly as Royce introduced the knights who had accompanied him, then said, âMy lords are welcome here. You know our Maester Colemon, of course. Lord Nestor, you will recall Alayne, my natural daughter?â
âTo be sure.â Lord Nestor Royce was a bullnecked, barrel-chested, balding man with a grey-shot beard and a stern look. He inclined his head a whole half inch in greeting.
Sansa curtsied, too frightened to speak for fear she might misspeak. Petyr drew her to her feet. âSweetling, be a good girl and bring Lord Robert to the High Hall to receive his guests.â
âYes, Father.â Her voice sounded thin and strained.
A liarâs voice,
she thought as she hurried up the steps and across the gallery to the Moon Tower.
A guilty voice.
Gretchel and Maddy were helping Robert Arryn squirm into his breeches when Sansa stepped into his bedchamber. The Lord of the Eyrie had been crying again. His eyes were red and raw, his lashes crusty, his nose swollen and runny. A trail of snot glistened underneath one nostril, and his lower lip was bloody where heâd bitten it.
Lord Nestor must not see him like this,
Sansa thought, despairing. âGretchel, fetch me the washbasin.â She took the boy by the hand and drew him to the bed. âDid my Sweetrobin sleep well last night?â
âNo.â He sniffed. âI never slept one bit, Alayne. He was
singing
again, and my
door
was locked. I called for them to let me out, but no one ever came. Someone locked me in my room.â
âThat was wicked of them.â Dipping a soft cloth into the warm water, she began to clean his face . . . gently, oh so gently. If you scrubbed Robert too briskly, he might begin to shake. The boy was frail, and terribly small for his age. He was eight, but Sansa had known bigger five-year-olds.
Robertâs lip quivered. âI was going to come sleep with you.â
I know you were.
Sweetrobin had been accustomed to crawling in beside his mother, until she wed Lord Petyr. Since Lady Lysaâs death he had taken to wandering the Eyrie in quest of other beds. The one he liked best was Sansaâs . . . which was why she had asked Ser Lothor Brune to lock his door last night. She would not have minded if he only slept, but he was always trying to nuzzle at her breasts, and when he had his shaking spells he often wet the bed.
âLord Nestor Royce has come up from the Gates to see you.â Sansa wiped beneath his nose.
âI donât want to see
him
,â he said. âI want a story. A story of the Winged Knight.â
âAfter,â Sansa said. âFirst you must see Lord
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