A Game of Thrones 4-Book Bundle
Jeyne Poole, her truest friend. The septa had lost her head with the
rest, for the crime of serving House Stark. Sansa did not know what had
happened to Jeyne, who had disappeared from her rooms afterward, never to be
mentioned again. She tried not to think of them too often, yet sometimes the
memories came unbidden, and then it was hard to hold back the tears. Once in a
while, Sansa even missed her sister. By now Arya was safe back in Winterfell,
dancing and sewing, playing with Bran and baby Rickon, even riding through the
winter town if she liked. Sansa was allowed to go riding too, but only in the
bailey, and it got boring going round in a circle all day.
She was wide awake when she heard the shouting. Distant at first, then growing
louder. Many voices yelling together. She
could not make out the words. And there were horses as well, and pounding feet,
shouts of command. She crept to her window and saw men running on the walls,
carrying spears and torches.
Go back to your bed,
Sansa told herself,
this is nothing that
concerns you, just some new trouble out in the
city.
The talk at the wells had all been of troubles in the city of late.
People were crowding in, running from the war, and many had no way to live save
by robbing and killing each other.
Go to bed.
But when she looked, the white knight was gone, the bridge across the dry moat
down but undefended.
Sansa turned away without thinking and ran to her wardrobe.
Oh, what am I
doing?
she asked herself as she dressed.
This is madness.
She
could see the lights of many torches on the curtain walls. Had Stannis and
Renly come at last to kill Joffrey and claim their brotherâs throne? If so, the
guards would raise the drawbridge, cutting off Maegorâs Holdfast from the outer
castle. Sansa threw a plain grey cloak over her shoulders and picked up the
knife she used to cut her meat.
If it is some trap, better that I die than
let them hurt me more,
she told herself. She hid the blade under her
cloak.
A column of red-cloaked swordsmen ran past as she slipped out into the night.
She waited until they were well past before she darted across the undefended
drawbridge. In the yard, men were buckling on swordbelts and cinching the
saddles of their horses. She glimpsed Ser Preston near the stables with three
others of the Kingsguard, white cloaks bright as the moon as they
helped Joffrey into his armor. Her breath caught in her throat when she saw the
king. Thankfully, he did not see her. He was shouting for his sword and
crossbow.
The noise receded as she moved deeper into the castle, never daring to look
back for fear that Joffrey might be watching . . . or worse,
following. The serpentine steps twisted ahead, striped by bars of flickering
light from the narrow windows above. Sansa was panting by the time she reached
the top. She ran down a shadowy colonnade and pressed herself against a wall to
catch her breath. When something brushed against her leg, she almost jumped out
of her skin, but it was only a cat, a ragged black tom with a chewed-off ear.
The creature spit at her and leapt away.
By the time she reached the godswood, the noises had faded to a faint rattle of
steel and a distant shouting. Sansa pulled her cloak tighter. The air was rich
with the smells of earth and leaf.
Lady would have liked this place,
she thought. There was something wild about a godswood; even here, in the heart
of the castle at the heart of the city, you could feel the old gods watching
with a thousand unseen eyes.
Sansa had favored her motherâs gods over her fatherâs. She loved the statues,
the pictures in leaded glass, the fragrance of burning incense, the septons
with their robes and crystals, the magical play of the rainbows over altars
inlaid with mother-of-pearl and onyx and lapis lazuli. Yet she could not deny
that the godswood had a certain power too. Especially by night.
Help
me,
she prayed,
send me a friend, a true knight to champion
me . . .
She moved from tree to tree, feeling the roughness of the bark beneath
her fingers. Leaves brushed at her cheeks. Had she come too late? He would not
have left so soon, would he? Or had he even been here? Dare she risk calling
out? It seemed so hushed and still here . . .
âI feared you would not come, child.â
Sansa whirled. A man stepped out of the shadows, heavyset, thick of neck,
shambling. He wore a dark grey robe with the cowl
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