A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
remained of them. Immense blocks of black basalt, each as large as a crofterâs cottage, lay scattered and tumbled like a childâswooden blocks, half-sunk in the soft boggy soil. Nothing else remained of a curtain wall that had once stood as high as Winterfellâs. The wooden keep was gone entirely, rotted away a thousand years past, with not so much as a timber to mark where it had stood. All that was left of the great stronghold of the First Men were three towers â¦Â three where there had once been twenty, if the taletellers could be believed.
The Gatehouse Tower looked sound enough, and even boasted a few feet of standing wall to either side of it. The Drunkardâs Tower, off in the bog where the south and west walls had once met, leaned like a man about to spew a bellyful of wine into the gutter. And the tall, slender Childrenâs Tower, where legend said the children of the forest had once called upon their nameless gods to send the hammer of the waters, had lost half its crown. It looked as if some great beast had taken a bite out of the crenellations along the tower top, and spit the rubble across the bog. All three towers were green with moss. A tree was growing out between the stones on the north side of the Gatehouse Tower, its gnarled limbs festooned with ropy white blankets of ghostskin.
âGods have mercy,â Ser Brynden exclaimed when he saw what lay before them.
âThis
is Moat Cailin? Itâs no more than aââ
ââdeath trap,â Catelyn finished. âI know how it looks, Uncle. I thought the same the first time I saw it, but Ned assured me that this
ruin
is more formidable than it seems. The three surviving towers command the causeway from all sides, and any enemy must pass between them. The bogs here are impenetrable, full of quicksands and suckholes and teeming with snakes. To assault any of the towers, an army would need to wade through waist-deep black muck, cross a moat full of lizard-lions, and scale walls slimy with moss, all the while exposing themselves to fire from archers in the other towers.â She gave her uncle a grim smile. âAnd when night falls, there are said to be ghosts, cold vengeful spirits of the north who hunger for southron blood.â
Ser Brynden chuckled. âRemind me not to linger here. Last I looked, I was southron myself.â
Standards had been raised atop all three towers. The Karstark sunburst hung from the Drunkardâs Tower, beneaththe direwolf; on the Childrenâs Tower it was the Greatjonâs giant in shattered chains. But on the Gatehouse Tower, the Stark banner flew alone. That was where Robb had made his seat. Catelyn made for it, with Ser Brynden and Ser Wendel behind her, their horses stepping slowly down the log-and-plank road that had been laid across the green-and-black fields of mud.
She found her son surrounded by his fatherâs lords bannermen, in a drafty hall with a peat fire smoking in a black hearth. He was seated at a massive stone table, a pile of maps and papers in front of him, talking intently with Roose Bolton and the Greatjon. At first he did not notice her â¦Â but his wolf did. The great grey beast was lying near the fire, but when Catelyn entered he lifted his head, and his golden eyes met hers. The lords fell silent one by one, and Robb looked up at the sudden quiet and saw her.
âMother!â
he said, his voice thick with emotion.
Catelyn wanted to run to him, to kiss his sweet brow, to wrap him in her arms and hold him so tightly that he would never come to harm â¦Â but here in front of his lords, she dared not. He was playing a manâs part now, and she would not take that away from him. So she held herself at the far end of the basalt slab they were using for a table. The direwolf got to his feet and padded across the room to where she stood. It seemed bigger than a wolf ought to be. âYouâve grown a beard,â she said to Robb, while Grey Wind sniffed her hand.
He rubbed his stubbled jaw, suddenly awkward. âYes.â His chin hairs were redder than the ones on his head.
âI like it.â Catelyn stroked the wolfâs head, gently. âIt makes you look like my brother Edmure.â Grey Wind nipped at her fingers, playful, and trotted back to his place by the fire.
Ser Helman Tallhart was the first to follow the direwolf across the room to pay his respects, kneeling before her and pressing his
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