A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
Edmureâs army was shattered beneath the walls of Riverrun. They had driven their horses as hard as they dared to reach this place before Jaime Lannister had word of their coming, and now the hour was at hand.
Catelyn watched her son mount up. Olyvar Frey held his horse for him, Lord Walderâs son, two years older than Robb, and ten years younger and more anxious. He strapped Robbâs shield in place and handed up his helm. When he lowered it over the face she loved so well, a tall young knight sat on his grey stallion where her son hadbeen. It was dark among the trees, where the moon did not reach. When Robb turned his head to look at her, she could see only black inside his visor. âI must ride down the line, Mother,â he told her. âFather says you should let the men see you before a battle.â
âGo, then,â she said. âLet them see you.â
âIt will give them courage,â Robb said.
And who will give me courage?
she wondered, yet she kept her silence and made herself smile for him. Robb turned the big grey stallion and walked him slowly away from her, Grey Wind shadowing his steps. Behind him his battle guard formed up. When heâd forced Catelyn to accept her protectors, she had insisted that he be guarded as well, and the lords bannermen had agreed. Many of their sons had clamored for the honor of riding with the Young Wolf, as they had taken to calling him. Torrhen Karstark and his brother Eddard were among his thirty, and Patrek Mallister, Smalljon Umber, Daryn Hornwood, Theon Greyjoy, no less than five of Walder Freyâs vast brood, along with older men like Ser Wendel Manderly and Robin Flint. One of his companions was even a woman: Dacey Mormont, Lady Maegeâs eldest daughter and heir to Bear Island, a lanky six-footer who had been given a morningstar at an age when most girls were given dolls. Some of the other lords muttered about that, but Catelyn would not listen to their complaints. âThis is not about the honor of your houses,â she told them. âThis is about keeping my son alive and whole.â
And if it comes to that
, she wondered,
will thirty be enough? Will six thousand be enough?
A bird called faintly in the distance, a high sharp trill that felt like an icy hand on Catelynâs neck. Another bird answered; a third, a fourth. She knew their call well enough, from her years at Winterfell. Snow shrikes. Sometimes you saw them in the deep of winter, when the godswood was white and still. They were northern birds.
They are coming
, Catelyn thought.
âTheyâre coming, my lady,â Hal Mollen whispered. He was always a man for stating the obvious. âGods be with us.â
She nodded as the woods grew still around them. In the quiet she could hear them, far off yet moving closer; the tread of many horses, the rattle of swords and spears andarmor, the murmur of human voices, with here a laugh, and there a curse.
Eons seemed to come and go. The sounds grew louder. She heard more laughter, a shouted command, splashing as they crossed and recrossed the little stream. A horse snorted. A man swore. And then at last she saw him â¦Â only for an instant, framed between the branches of the trees as she looked down at the valley floor, yet she knew it was him. Even at a distance, Ser Jaime Lannister was unmistakable. The moonlight had silvered his armor and the gold of his hair, and turned his crimson cloak to black. He was not wearing a helm.
He was there and he was gone again, his silvery armor obscured by the trees once more. Others came behind him, long columns of them, knights and sworn swords and freeriders, three quarters of the Lannister horse.
âHe is no man for sitting in a tent while his carpenters build siege towers,â Ser Brynden had promised. âHe has ridden out with his knights thrice already, to chase down raiders or storm a stubborn holdfast.â
Nodding, Robb had studied the map her uncle had drawn him. Ned had taught him to read maps. âRaid him
here,â
he said, pointing. âA few hundred men, no more. Tully banners. When he comes after you, we will be waitingââhis finger moved an inch to the leftââhere.â
Here
was a hush in the night, moonlight and shadows, a thick carpet of dead leaves underfoot, densely wooded ridges sloping gently down to the streambed, the underbrush thinning as the ground fell away.
Here
was her son on his
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