A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
Braavos and dreamed of one day coming here. He wanted to behold the Titan rising stern and fearsome from the sea, glide down the canals in a serpent boat past all the palaces and temples, and watch the bravos do their water dance, blades flashing in the starlight. But now that he was here, all he wanted was to leave and go to Oldtown.
With his hood up and his cloak flapping, he made his way along the cobblestones toward the Ragmanâs Harbor. His swordbelt kept threatening to fall down about his ankles, so he had to keep tugging it back up as he went. He stayed to the smaller, darker streets, where he was less likely to encounter anyone, yet every passing cat still made his heart thump . . . and Braavos crawled with cats.
I need to find Dareon,
he thought.
He is a man of the Nightâs Watch, my Sworn Brother; he and I will puzzle out what to do.
Maester Aemonâs strength was gone, and Gilly would have been lost here even if she had not been grief-stricken, but Dareon . . .
I should not think ill of him. He could be hurt, perhaps that is why he did not come back. He could be dead, lying in some alley in a pool of blood, or floating facedown in one of the canals.
At night the bravos swaggered through the city in their parti-colored finery, spoiling to prove their skill with those slender swords they wore. Some would fight for any cause, some for none at all, and Dareon had a loose tongue and quick temper, especially when heâd been drinking.
Just because a man can sing about battles doesnât mean heâs fit to fight one.
The best alehouses, inns, and brothels were near the Purple Harbor or the Moon Pool, but Dareon preferred the Ragmanâs Harbor, where the patrons were more apt to speak the Common Tongue. Sam began his search at the Inn of the Green Eel, the Black Bargeman, and Moroggoâs, places where Dareon had played before. He was not to be found at any of them. Outside the Foghouse several serpent boats were tied up awaiting patrons, and Sam tried to ask the polemen if they had seen a singer all in black, but none of the polemen understood his High Valyrian.
That, or they do not chose to understand.
Sam peered into the dingy winesink beneath the second arch of Nabboâs Bridge, barely large enough to accommodate ten people. Dareon was not one of them. He tried the Outcast Inn, the House of Seven Lamps, and the brothel called the Cattery, where he got strange looks but no help.
Leaving, he almost bumped into two young men beneath the Catteryâs red lantern. One was dark and one was fair. The dark-haired one said something in Braavosi. âI am sorry,â Sam had to say. âI do not understand.â He edged away from them, afraid. In the Seven Kingdoms nobles draped themselves in velvets, silks, and samites of a hundred hues whilst peasants and smallfolk wore raw wool and dull brown roughspun. In Braavos it was otherwise. The bravos swaggered about like peacocks, fingering their swords, whilst the mighty dressed in charcoal grey and purple, blues that were almost black and blacks as dark as a moonless night.
âMy friend Terro says you are so fat you make him sick,â said the fair-haired bravo, whose jacket was green velvet on one side and cloth-of-silver on the other. âMy friend Terro says that the rattle of your sword makes his head ache.â He was speaking in the Common Tongue. The other one, the dark-haired bravo in the burgundy brocade and yellow cloak whose name would appear to have been Terro, made some comment in Braavosi, and his fair-haired friend laughed, and said, âMy friend Terro says you dress above your station. Are you some great lord, to wear the black?â
Sam wanted to run, but if he did was like to trip over his own swordbelt.
Do not touch your sword,
he told himself. Even a finger on the hilt might be enough for one or the other of the bravos to take as a challenge. He tried to think of words that might appease them. âIâm notââ was all he managed.
âHe is not a lord,â a childâs voice put in. âHeâs in the Nightâs Watch, stupid. From
Westeros.
â A girl edged into the light, pushing a barrow full of seaweed; a scruffy, skinny creature in big boots, with ragged unwashed hair. âThereâs another one down at the Happy Port, singing songs to the Sailorâs Wife,â she informed the two bravos. To Sam she said, âIf they ask who is the most beautiful woman in
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