A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
Tyrion buried his axe in his head.
âYou
die,â he told him, and he did.
As he wrenched the blade free, he heard a shout.
âEddard!â
a voice rang out.
âFor Eddard and Winterfell!â
The knight came thundering down on him, swinging the spiked ball of a morningstar around his head. Their warhorses slammed together before Tyrion could so much as open his mouth to shout for Bronn. His right elbow exploded with pain as the spikes punched through the thinmetal around the joint. His axe was gone, as fast as that. He clawed for his sword, but the morningstar was circling again, coming at his face. A sickening
crunch
, and he was falling. He did not recall hitting the ground, but when he looked up there was only sky above him. He rolled onto his side and tried to find his feet, but pain shuddered through him and the world throbbed. The knight who had felled him drew up above him. âTyrion the Imp,â he boomed down. âYou are mine. Do you yield, Lannister?â
Yes
, Tyrion thought, but the word caught in his throat. He made a croaking sound and fought his way to his knees, fumbling for a weapon. His sword, his dirk, anything â¦
âDo you yield?â The knight loomed overhead on his armored warhorse. Man and horse both seemed immense. The spiked ball swung in a lazy circle. Tyrionâs hands were numb, his vision blurred, his scabbard empty. âYield or die,â the knight declared, his flail whirling faster and faster.
Tyrion lurched to his feet, driving his head into the horseâs belly. The animal gave a hideous scream and reared. It tried to twist away from the agony, a shower of blood and viscera poured down over Tyrionâs face, and the horse fell like an avalanche. The next he knew, his visor was packed with mud and something was crushing his foot. He wriggled free, his throat so tight he could scarce talk. ââ¦Â yield â¦â he managed to croak faintly.
âYes,â a voice moaned, thick with pain.
Tyrion scraped the mud off his helm so he could see again. The horse had fallen away from him, onto its rider. The knightâs leg was trapped, the arm heâd used to break his fall twisted at a grotesque angle. âYield,â he repeated. Fumbling at his belt with his good hand, he drew a sword and flung it at Tyrionâs feet. âI yield, my lord.â
Dazed, the dwarf knelt and lifted the blade. Pain hammered through his elbow when he moved his arm. The battle seemed to have moved beyond him. No one remained on his part of the field save a large number of corpses. Ravens were already circling and landing to feed. He saw that Ser Kevan had brought up his center in support of the van; his huge mass of pikemen had pushed the northerners back against the hills. They were struggling on the slopes, pikes thrusting against another wall ofshields, these oval and reinforced with iron studs. As he watched, the air filled with arrows again, and the men behind the oak wall crumbled beneath the murderous fire. âI believe you are losing, ser,â he told the knight under the horse. The man made no reply.
The sound of hooves coming up behind him made him whirl, though he could scarcely lift the sword he held for the agony in his elbow. Bronn reined up and looked down on him.
âSmall use you turned out to be,â Tyrion told him.
âIt would seem you did well enough on your own,â Bronn answered. âYouâve lost the spike off your helm, though.â
Tyrion groped at the top of the greathelm. The spike had snapped off clean. âI havenât lost it. I know just where it is. Do you see my horse?â
By the time they found it, the trumpets had sounded again and Lord Tywinâs reserve came sweeping up along the river. Tyrion watched his father fly past, the crimson-and-gold banner of Lannister rippling over his head as he thundered across the field. Five hundred knights surrounded him, sunlight flashing off the points of their lances. The remnants of the Stark lines shattered like glass beneath the hammer of their charge.
With his elbow swollen and throbbing inside his armor, Tyrion made no attempt to join the slaughter. He and Bronn went looking for his men. Many he found among the dead. Ulf son of Umar lay in a pool of congealing blood, his arm gone at the elbow, a dozen of his Moon Brothers sprawled around him. Shagga was slumped beneath a tree, riddled with arrows, Connâs head in his
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