A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
you
know?
â
âI only think,â she had to confess, even though she was certain of it. Mummers had to eat the same as other men, and Quence and Alaquo were not good enough for the Blue Lantern.
âJust so,â said the kindly man. âAnd the third thing?â
This time she did not hesitate. âDareon is dead. The black singer who was sleeping at the Happy Port. He was really a deserter from the Nightâs Watch. Someone slit his throat and pushed him into a canal, but they kept his boots.â
âGood boots are hard to find.â
âJust so.â She tried to keep her face still.
âWho could have done this thing, I wonder?â
âArya of House Stark.â She watched his eyes, his mouth, the muscles of his jaw.
âThat girl? I thought she had left Braavos. Who are you?â
âNo one.â
âYou lie.â He turned to the waif. âMy throat is dry. Do me a kindness and bring a cup of wine for me and warm milk for our friend Arya, who has returned to us so unexpectedly.â
On her way across the city Arya had wondered what the kindly man would say when she told him about Dareon. Maybe he would be angry with her, or maybe he would be pleased that she had given the singer the gift of the Many-Faced God. She had played this talk out in her head half a hundred times, like a mummer in a show. But she had never thought
warm milk.
When the milk came, Arya drank it down. It smelled a little burnt and had a bitter aftertaste. âGo to bed now, child,â the kindly man said. âOn the morrow you must serve.â
That night she dreamed she was a wolf again, but it was different from the other dreams. In this dream she had no pack. She prowled alone, bounding over rooftops and padding silently beside the banks of a canal, stalking shadows through the fog.
When she woke the next morning, she was blind.
SAMWELL
T he
Cinnamon Wind
was a swan ship out of Tall Trees Town on the Summer Isles, where men were black, women were wanton, and even the gods were strange. She had no septon aboard her to lead them in the prayers of passing, so the task fell to Samwell Tarly, somewhere off the sun-scorched southern coast of Dorne.
Sam donned his blacks to say the words, though the afternoon was warm and muggy, with nary a breath of wind. âHe was a good man,â he began . . . but as soon as he had said the words he knew that they were wrong. âNo. He was a
great
man. A maester of the Citadel, chained and sworn, and Sworn Brother of the Nightâs Watch, ever faithful. When he was born they named him for a hero who had died too young, but though he lived a long long time, his own life was no less heroic. No man was wiser, or gentler, or kinder. At the Wall, a dozen lords commander came and went during his years of service, but he was always there to counsel them. He counseled kings as well. He could have been a king himself, but when they offered him the crown he told them they should give it to his younger brother. How many men would do that?â Sam felt the tears welling in his eyes, and knew he could not go on much longer. âHe was the blood of the dragon, but now his fire has gone out. He was Aemon Targaryen. And now his watch is ended.â
âAnd now his watch is ended,â Gilly murmured after him, rocking the babe in her arms. Kojja Mo echoed her in the Common Tongue of Westeros, then repeated the words in the Summer Tongue for Xhondo and her father and the rest of the assembled crew. Sam hung his head and began to weep, his sobs so loud and wrenching that they made his whole body shake. Gilly came and stood beside him and let him cry upon her shoulder. There were tears in her eyes as well.
The air was moist and warm and dead calm, and the
Cinnamon Wind
was adrift upon a deep blue sea far beyond the sight of land. âBlack Sam said good words,â Xhondo said. âNow we drink his life.â He shouted something in the Summer Tongue, and a cask of spiced rum was rolled up onto the afterdeck and breached, so those on watch might down a cup in the memory of the old blind dragon. The crew had known him only a short while, but Summer Islanders revered the elderly and celebrated their dead.
Sam had never drunk rum before. The liquor was strange and heady; sweet at first, but with a fiery aftertaste that burned his tongue. He was tired, so tired. Every muscle he had was aching, and there were other aches in places where
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher