A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
enough when their captain failed to move. He might have smiled if heâd dared.
âWinterfell it is, then,â he said instead. That was a long ride, as he could well attest, having just ridden it the other way. So many things could happen along the way. âMy father will wonder what has become of me,â he added, catching the eye of the swordsman whoâd offeredto yield up his room. âHeâll pay a handsome reward to any man who brings him word of what happened here today.â Lord Tywin would do no such thing, of course, but Tyrion would make up for it if he won free.
Ser Rodrik glanced at his lady, his look worried, as well it might be. âHis men come with him,â the old knight announced. âAnd weâll thank the rest of you to stay quiet about what youâve seen here.â
It was all Tyrion could do not to laugh.
Quiet?
The old fool. Unless he took the whole inn, the word would begin to spread the instant they were gone. The freerider with the gold coin in his pocket would fly to Casterly Rock like an arrow. If not him, then someone else. Yoren would carry the story south. That fool singer might make a lay of it. The Freys would report back to their lord, and the gods only knew what he might do. Lord Walder Frey might be sworn to Riverrun, but he was a cautious man who had lived a long time by making certain he was always on the winning side. At the very least he would send his birds winging south to Kingâs Landing, and he might well dare more than that.
Catelyn Stark wasted no time. âWe must ride at once. Weâll want fresh mounts, and provisions for the road. You men, know that you have the eternal gratitude of House Stark. If any of you choose to help us guard our captives and get them safe to Winterfell, I promise you shall be well rewarded.â That was all it took; the fools came rushing forward. Tyrion studied their faces; they would indeed be well rewarded, he vowed to himself, but perhaps not quite as they imagined.
Yet even as they were bundling him outside, saddling the horses in the rain, and tying his hands with a length of coarse rope, Tyrion Lannister was not truly afraid. They would never get him to Winterfell, he would have given odds on that. Riders would be after them within the day, birds would take wing, and surely one of the river lords would want to curry favor with his father enough to take a hand. Tyrion was congratulating himself on his subtlety when someone pulled a hood down over his eyes and lifted him up onto a saddle.
They set out through the rain at a hard gallop, and before long Tyrionâs thighs were cramped and aching and his butt throbbed with pain. Even when they were safelyaway from the inn, and Catelyn Stark slowed them to a trot, it was a miserable pounding journey over rough ground, made worse by his blindness. Every twist and turn put him in danger of falling off his horse. The hood muffled sound, so he could not make out what was being said around him, and the rain soaked through the cloth and made it cling to his face, until even breathing was a struggle. The rope chafed his wrists raw and seemed to grow tighter as the night wore on.
I was about to settle down to a warm fire and a roast fowl, and that wretched singer had to open his mouth
, he thought mournfully. The wretched singer had come along with them. âThere is a great song to be made from this, and Iâm the one to make it,â he told Catelyn Stark when he announced his intention of riding with them to see how the âsplendid adventureâ turned out. Tyrion wondered whether the boy would think the adventure quite so splendid once the Lannister riders caught up with them.
The rain had finally stopped and dawn light was seeping through the wet cloth over his eyes when Catelyn Stark gave the command to dismount. Rough hands pulled him down from his horse, untied his wrists, and yanked the hood off his head. When he saw the narrow stony road, the foothills rising high and wild all around them, and the jagged snowcapped peaks on the distant horizon, all the hope went out of him in a rush. âThis is the high road,â he gasped, looking at Lady Stark with accusation. âThe
eastern
road. You said we were riding for Winterfell!â
Catelyn Stark favored him with the faintest of smiles. âOften and loudly,â she agreed. âNo doubt your friends will ride that way when they come after us. I wish them good
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