A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
looking at her. âYou hurt?â
Calm as still water,
she told herself, the way Syrio Forel had
taught her. âSome.â
He spat. âThat pie boyâs hurting worse. It wasnât him as killed your father,
girl, nor that thieving Lommy neither. Hitting them wonât bring him
back.â
âI know,â Arya muttered sullenly.
âHereâs something you donât know. It wasnât supposed to happen like it did. I
was set to leave, wagons bought and loaded, and a man comes with a boy for me,
and a purse of coin, and a message, never mind who itâs from. Lord Eddardâs to
take the black, he says to me, wait, heâll be going with you. Why dâyou think I
was there? Only something went queer.â
âJoffrey,â
Arya breathed. âSomeone should kill
him!
â
âSomeone will, but it wonât be me, nor you neither.â Yoren tossed back her
stick sword. âGot sourleaf back at the wagons,â he said as they made their
way back to the road. âYouâll chew some, itâll help with the
sting.â
It did help, some, though the taste of it was foul and it made her spit look
like blood. Even so, she walked for the rest of that day, and the day after,
and the day after
that,
too raw to sit a donkey. Hot Pie was worse
off; Yoren had to shift some barrels around so he could lie in the back of a
wagon on some sacks of barley, and he whimpered every time the wheels hit a
rock. Lommy Greenhands wasnât even hurt, yet he stayed as far away from Arya as
he could get. âEvery time you look at him, he twitches,â the Bull told her as
she walked beside his donkey.
She did not answer. It seemed safer not to talk to anyone.
That night she lay upon her thin blanket on the hard ground, staring up at the
great red comet. The comet was splendid and scary all at once. âThe Red
Sword,â the Bull named it; he claimed it looked like a sword, the blade still
red-hot from the forge. When Arya squinted the right way she could see the
sword too, only it wasnât a new sword, it was Ice, her fatherâs greatsword, all
ripply Valyrian steel, and the red was Lord Eddardâs blood on the blade after
Ser Ilyn the Kingâs Justice had cut off his head. Yoren had made her look away
when it happened, yet it seemed to her that the comet looked like Ice must
have, after.
When at last she slept, she dreamed of home. The kingsroad wound its way past
Winterfell on its way to the Wall, and Yoren had promised heâd leave her there
with no one any wiser about who sheâd been. She yearned to see her mother
again, and Robb and Bran and Rickon . . . but it was Jon Snow
she thought of most. She wished somehow they could come to the Wall
before
Winterfell, so Jon might muss up her hair and call her
âlittle sister.â Sheâd tell him, âI missed you,â and heâd say it too at the
very same moment, the way they always used to say things together. She would
have liked that. She would have liked that better than anything.
SANSA
T he morning of King Joffreyâs name day dawned bright and windy, with the
long tail of the great comet visible through the high scuttling clouds. Sansa
was watching it from her tower window when Ser Arys Oakheart arrived to escort
her down to the tourney grounds. âWhat do you think it means?â she asked
him.
âGlory to your betrothed,â Ser Arys answered at once. âSee how it flames
across the sky today on His Graceâs name day, as if the gods themselves had
raised a banner in his honor. The smallfolk have named it King Joffreyâs
Comet.â
Doubtless that was what they told Joffrey; Sansa was not so sure. âIâve
heard servants calling it the Dragonâs Tail.â
âKing Joffrey sits where Aegon the Dragon once sat, in the castle built by his
son,â Ser Arys said. âHe is the dragonâs heirâand crimson is the color
of House Lannister, another sign. This comet is sent to herald Joffreyâs ascent
to the throne, I have no doubt. It means that he will triumph over his
enemies.â
Is it true?
she wondered.
Would the gods be so cruel?
Her
mother was one of Joffreyâs enemies now, her brother Robb another. Her father
had died by the kingâs command. Must Robb and her lady mother die next? The
comet
was
red, but Joffrey was Baratheon as much as Lannister, and
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