A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
out.â
When she took it out, he died.
The horses were screaming. Arya stood over the body, still and frightened in the face of death. Blood had gushed from the boyâs mouth as he collapsed, and more was seeping from the slit in his belly, pooling beneath his body. His palms were cut where heâd grabbed at the blade. She backed away slowly, Needle red in her hand. She had to get away, someplace far from here, someplace safe away from the stableboyâs accusing eyes.
She snatched up the bridle and harness again and ran to her mare, but as she lifted the saddle to the horseâs back, Arya realized with a sudden sick dread that the castle gates would be closed. Even the postern doors would likely be guarded. Maybe the guards wouldnât recognize her. If they thought she was a boy, perhaps theyâd let her â¦Â no, theyâd have orders not to let
anyone
out, it wouldnât matter whether they knew her or not.
But there was another way out of the castle â¦
The saddle slipped from Aryaâs fingers and fell to the dirt with a thump and a puff of dust. Could she find theroom with the monsters again? She wasnât certain, yet she knew she had to try.
She found the clothing sheâd gathered and slipped into the cloak, concealing Needle beneath its folds. The rest of her things she tied in a roll. With the bundle under her arm, she crept to the far end of the stable. Unlatching the back door, she peeked out anxiously. She could hear the distant sound of swordplay, and the shivery wail of a man screaming in pain across the bailey. She would need to go down the serpentine steps, past the small kitchen and the pig yard, that was how sheâd gone last time, chasing the black tomcat â¦Â only that would take her right past the barracks of the gold cloaks. She couldnât go that way. Arya tried to think of another way. If she crossed to the other side of the castle, she could creep along the river wall and through the little godswood â¦Â but first sheâd have to cross the yard, in the plain view of the guards on the walls.
She had never seen so many men on the walls. Gold cloaks, most of them, armed with spears. Some of them knew her by sight. What would they do if they saw her running across the yard? Sheâd look so small from up there, would they be able to tell who she was? Would they care?
She had to leave
now
, she told herself, but when the moment came, she was too frightened to move.
Calm as still water
, a small voice whispered in her ear. Arya was so startled she almost dropped her bundle. She looked around wildly, but there was no one in the stable but her, and the horses, and the dead men.
Quiet as a shadow
, she heard. Was it her own voice, or Syrioâs? She could not tell, yet somehow it calmed her fears.
She stepped out of the stable.
It was the scariest thing sheâd ever done. She wanted to run and hide, but she made herself
walk
across the yard, slowly, putting one foot in front of the other as if she had all the time in the world and no reason to be afraid of anyone. She thought she could feel their eyes, like bugs crawling on her skin under her clothes. Arya never looked up. If she saw them watching, all her courage would desert her, she knew, and she would drop the bundle of clothes and run and cry like a baby, and then they wouldhave her. She kept her gaze on the ground. By the time she reached the shadow of the royal sept on the far side of the yard, Arya was cold with sweat, but no one had raised the hue and cry.
The sept was open and empty. Inside, half a hundred prayer candles burned in a fragrant silence. Arya figured the gods would never miss two. She stuffed them up her sleeves, and left by a back window. Sneaking back to the alley where she had cornered the one-eared tom was easy, but after that she got lost. She crawled in and out of windows, hopped over walls, and felt her way through dark cellars, quiet as a shadow. Once she heard a woman weeping. It took her more than an hour to find the low narrow window that slanted down to the dungeon where the monsters waited.
She tossed her bundle through and doubled back to light her candle. That was chancy; the fire sheâd remembered seeing had burnt down to embers, and she heard voices as she was blowing on the coals. Cupping her fingers around the flickering candle, she went out the window as they were coming in the door, without ever getting a glimpse
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