 

A SONG OFICE ANDFIRE

GEORGE R. R. MARTIN

 

A GAME OFTHRONES(1996)

A CLASH OFKINGS(1998)

A STORM OFSWORDS(2000)

A FEAST FORCROWS(forthcoming)

A DANCE WITHDRAGONS(forthcoming)

THEWINDS OFWINTER(forthcoming)



/A Song of Ice and Fire/began life as a trilogy, and has since expanded
to six books. As J. R. R. Tolkien once said, the tale grew in the telling.

The setting for the books is the great continent of Westeros, in a world
both like and unlike our own, where the seasons last for years and
sometimes decades. Standing hard against the sunset sea at the western
edge of the known world, Westeros stretches from the red sands of Dorne
in the south to the icy mountains and frozen fields of the north, where
snow falls even during the long summers.

The children of the forest were the first known inhabitants of Westeros,
during the Dawn of Days: a race small of stature who made their homes in
the greenwood, and carved strange faces in the bone-white weirwood
trees. Then came the First Men, who crossed a land bridge from the
larger continent to the east with their bronze swords and horses, and
warred against the children for centuries before finally making peace
with the older race and adopting their nameless, ancient gods. The
Compact marked the beginning of the Age of Heroes, when the First Men
and the children shared Westeros, and a hundred petty kingdoms rose and
fell.

Other invaders came in turn. The Andals crossed the narrow sea in ships,
and with iron and fire they swept across the kingdoms of the First Men,
and drove the children from their forests, putting many of the weirwoods
to the ax. They brought their own faith, worshiping a god with seven
aspects whose symbol was a seven-pointed star. Only in the far north did
the First Men, led by the Starks of Winterfell, throw back the
newcomers. Elsewhere the Andals triumphed, and raised kingdoms of their
own. The children of the forest dwindled and disappeared, while the
First Men intermarried with their conquerors.

The Rhoynar arrived some thousands of years after the Andals, and came
not as invaders but as refugees, crossing the seas in ten thousand ships
to escape the growing might of the Freehold of Valyria. The lords
freeholder of Valyria ruled the greater part of the known world; they
were sorcerers, great in lore, and alone of all the races of man they
had learned to breed dragons and bend them to their will. Four hundred
years before the opening of/A Song of Ice and Fire/ , however, the Doom
descended on Valyria, destroying the city in a single night. Thereafter
the great Valyrian empire disintegrated into dissension, barbarism, and war.

Westeros, across the narrow sea, was spared the worst of the chaos that
followed. By that time only seven kingdoms remained where once there had
been hundreds?but they would not stand for much longer. A scion of lost
Valyria named Aegon Targaryen landed at the mouth of the Blackwater with
a small army, his two sisters (who were also his wives), and three great
dragons. Riding on dragonback, Aegon and his sisters won battle after
battle, and subdued six of the seven Westerosi kingdoms by fire, sword,
and treaty. The conqueror collected the melted, twisted blades of his
fallen foes, and used them to make a monstrous, towering barbed seat:
the Iron Throne, from which he ruled henceforth as Aegon, the First of
His Name, King of the Andals and the Rhoynar and the First Men, and Lord
of the Seven Kingdoms.

The dynasty founded by Aegon and his sisters endured for most of three
hundred years. Another Targaryen king, Daeron the Second, later brought
Dorne into the realm, uniting all of Westeros under a single ruler. He
did so by marriage, not conquest, for the last of the dragons had died
half a century before./The Hedge Knight,/ published in the
first/Legends/ , takes place in the last days of Good King Daeron?s
reign, about a hundred years before the opening of the first of the/Ice
and Fire/ novels, with the realm at peace and the Targaryen dynasty at
its height. It tells the story of the first meeting between Dunk, a
hedge knight?s squire, and Egg, a boy who is rather more than he seems,
and of the great tourney at Ashford Meadow./The Sworn Sword,/ the tale
that follows, picks up their story a year or so later.

 

THE SWORN SWORD

/A Tale of the Seven Kingdoms/

GEORGE R. R. MARTIN

 

In an iron cage at the crossroads, two dead men were rotting in the
summer sun.

Egg stopped below to have a look at them. ?Who do you think they were,
ser?? His mule Maester, grateful for the respite, began to crop the dry
brown devilgrass along the verges, heedless of the two huge wine casks
on his back.

?Robbers,? Dunk said. Mounted atop Thunder, he was much closer to the
dead men. ?Rapers. Murderers.? Dark circles stained his old green tunic
under both arms. The sky was blue and the sun was blazing hot, and he
had sweated gallons since breaking camp this morning.

Egg took off his wide-brimmed floppy straw hat. Beneath, his head was
bald and shiny. He used the hat to fan away the flies. There were
hundreds crawling on the dead men, and more drifting lazily through the
still, hot air. ?It must have been something bad, for them to be left to
die inside a crow cage.?

Sometimes Egg could be as wise as any maester, but other times he was
still a boy of ten. ?There are lords and lords,? Dunk said. ?Some don?t
need much reason to put a man to death.?

The iron cage was barely big enough to hold one man, yet two had been
forced inside it. They stood face to face, with their arms and legs in a
tangle and their backs against the hot black iron of the bars. One had
tried to eat the other, gnawing at his neck and shoulder. The crows had
been at both of them. When Dunk and Egg had come around the hill, the
birds had risen like a black cloud, so thick that Maester spooked.

?Whoever they were, they look half starved,? Dunk said./Skeletons in
skin, and the skin is green and rotting./ ?Might be they stole some
bread, or poached a deer in some lord?s wood.? With the drought entering
its second year, most lords had become less tolerant of poaching, and
they hadn?t been very tolerant to begin with.

?It could be they were in some outlaw band.? At Dosk, they?d heard a
harper sing ?The Day They Hanged Black Robin.? Ever since, Egg had been
seeing gallant outlaws behind every bush.

Dunk had met a few outlaws while squiring for the old man. He was in no
hurry to meet any more. None of the ones he?d known had been especially
gallant. He remembered one outlaw Ser Arlan had helped hang, who?d been
fond of stealing rings. He would cut off a man?s fingers to get at them,
but with women he preferred to bite. There were no songs about him that
Dunk knew./Outlaws or poachers, makes no matter. Dead men make poor
company./ He walked Thunder slowly around the cage. The empty eyes
seemed to follow him. One of the dead men had his head down and his
mouth gaping open./He has no tongue,/ Dunk observed. He supposed the
crows might have eaten it. Crows always pecked a corpse?s eyes out
first, he had heard, but maybe the tongue went second./Or maybe a lord
had it torn out, for something that he said./

Dunk pushed his fingers through his mop of sun-streaked hair. The dead
were beyond his help, and they had casks of wine to get to Standfast.
?Which way did we come?? he asked, looking from one road to the other.
?I?m turned around.?

?Standfast is that way, ser.? Egg pointed.

?That?s for us, then. We could be back by evenfall, but not if we sit
here all day counting flies.? He touched Thunder with his heels and
turned the big destrier toward the left-hand fork. Egg put his floppy
hat back on and tugged sharply at Maester?s lead. The mule left off
cropping at the devilgrass and came along without an argument for
once./He?s hot as well,/ Dunk thought,/and those wine casks must be heavy./

The summer sun had baked the road as hard as brick. Its ruts were deep
enough to break a horse?s leg, so Dunk was careful to keep Thunder to
the higher ground between them. He had twisted his own ankle the day
they left Dosk, walking in the black of night when it was cooler. A
knight had to learn to live with aches and pains, the old man used to
say./Aye, lad, and with broken bones and scars. They?re as much a part
of knighthood as your swords and shields./ If Thunder was to break a
leg, though . . . well, a knight without a horse was no knight at all.

Egg followed five yards behind him, with Maester and the wine casks. The
boy was walking with one bare foot in a rut and one out, so he rose and
fell with every step. His dagger was sheathed on one hip, his boots
slung over his backpack, his ragged brown tunic rolled up and knotted
around his waist. Beneath his wide-brimmed straw hat, his face was
smudged and dirty, his eyes large and dark. He was ten, not quite five
feet tall. Of late he had been sprouting fast, though he had a long long
way to grow before he?d be catching up to Dunk. He looked just like the
stableboy he wasn?t, and not at all like who he really was.

The dead men soon disappeared behind them, but Dunk found himself
thinking about them all the same. The realm was full of lawless men
these days. The drought showed no signs of ending, and smallfolk by the
thousands had taken to the roads, looking for someplace where the rains
still fell. Lord Bloodraven had commanded them to return to their own
lands and lords, but few obeyed. Many blamed Bloodraven and King Aerys
for the drought. It was a judgment from the gods, they said, for the
kinslayer is accursed. If they were wise, though, they did not say it
loudly./How many eyes does Lord Bloodraven have?/ ran the riddle Egg had
heard in Oldtown./A thousand eyes, and one./

Six years ago in King?s Landing, Dunk had seen him with his own two
eyes, as he rode a pale horse up the Street of Steel with fifty Raven?s
Teeth behind him. That was before King Aerys had ascended to the Iron
Throne and made him the Hand, but even so he cut a striking figure,
garbed in smoke and scarlet with Dark Sister on his hip. His pallid skin
and bone-white hair made him look a living corpse. Across his cheek and
chin spread a wine-stain birthmark that was supposed to resemble a red
raven, though Dunk only saw an odd-shaped blotch of discolored skin. He
stared so hard that Bloodraven felt it. The king?s sorcerer had turned
to study him as he went by. He had one eye, and that one red. The other
was an empty socket, the gift Bittersteel had given him upon the
Redgrass Field. Yet it seemed to Dunk that both eyes had looked right
through his skin, down to his very soul.

Despite the heat, the memory made him shiver. ?Ser?? Egg called. ?Are
you unwell??

?No,? said Dunk. ?I?m as hot and thirsty as them.? He pointed toward the
field beyond the road, where rows of melons were shriveling on the
vines. Along the verges goatheads and tufts of devilgrass still clung to
life, but the crops were not faring near as well. Dunk knew just how the
melons felt. Ser Arlan used to say that no hedge knight need ever go
thirsty. ?Not so long as he has a helm to catch the rain in. Rainwater
is the best drink there is, lad.? The old man never saw a summer like
this one, though. Dunk had left his helm at Standfast. It was too hot
and heavy to wear, and there had been precious little rain to catch in
it./What?s a hedge knight do when even the hedges are brown and parched
and dying?/

Maybe when they reached the stream he?d have a soak. He smiled, thinking
how good that would feel, to jump right in and come up sopping wet and
grinning, with water cascading down his cheeks and through his tangled
hair and his tunic clinging sodden to his skin. Egg might want a soak as
well, though the boy looked cool and dry, more dusty than sweaty. He
never sweated much. He liked the heat. In Dorne he went about
bare-chested, and turned brown as a Dornishman./It is his dragon blood,/
Dunk told himself./Whoever heard of a sweaty dragon?/ He would gladly
have pulled his own tunic off, but it would not be fitting. A hedge
knight could ride bare naked if he chose; he had no one to shame but
himself. It was different when your sword was sworn./When you accept a
lord?s meat and mead, all you do reflects on him,/ Ser Arlan used to
say./Always do more than he expects of you, never less. Never flinch at
any task or hardship. And above all, never shame the lord you serve./ At
Standfast, ?meat and mead? meant chicken and ale, but Ser Eustace ate
the same plain fare himself.

Dunk kept his tunic on, and sweltered.

 

Ser Bennis of the Brown Shield was waiting at the old plank bridge. ?So
you come back,? he called out. ?You were gone so long I thought you run
off with the old man?s silver.? Bennis was sitting on his shaggy garron,
chewing a wad of sourleaf that made it look as if his mouth were full of
blood.

?We had to go all the way to Dosk to find some wine,? Dunk told him.
?The krakens raided Little Dosk. They carried off the wealth and women
and burned half of what they did not take.?

?That Dagon Greyjoy wants for hanging,? Bennis said. ?Aye, but who?s to
hang him? You see old Pinchbottom Pate??

?They told us he was dead. The ironmen killed him when he tried to stop
them taking off his daughter.?

?Seven bloody hells.? Bennis turned his head and spat. ?I seen that
daughter once. Not worth dying for, you ask me. That fool Pate owed me
half a silver.? The brown knight looked just as he had when they left;
worse, he smelled the same as well. He wore the same garb every day:
brown breeches, a shapeless roughspun tunic, horsehide boots. When
armored he donned a loose brown surcoat over a shirt of rusted mail. His
swordbelt was a cord of boiled leather, and his seamed face might have
been made of the same thing./His head looks like one of those shriveled
melons that we passed./ Even his teeth were brown, under the red stains
left by the sourleaf he liked to chew. Amidst all that brownness, his
eyes stood out; they were a pale green, squinty small, close set, and
shiny-bright with malice. ?Only two casks,? he observed. ?Ser Useless
wanted four.?

?We were lucky to find two,? said Dunk. ?The drought reached the Arbor,
too. We heard the grapes are turning into raisins on the vines, and the
ironmen have been pirating??

?Ser?? Egg broke in. ?The water?s gone.?

Dunk had been so intent on Bennis that he hadn?t noticed. Beneath the
warped wooden planks of the bridge only sand and stones remained./That?s
queer. The stream was running low when we left, but it was running./

Bennis laughed. He had two sorts of laughs. Sometimes he cackled like a
chicken, and sometimes he brayed louder than Egg?s mule. This was his
chicken laugh. ?Dried up while you was gone, I guess. A drought?ll do that.?

Dunk was dismayed./Well, I won?t be soaking now./ He swung down to the
ground./What?s going to happen to the crops?/ Half the wells in the
Reach had gone dry, and all the rivers were running low, even the
Blackwater Rush and the mighty Mander.

?Nasty stuff, water,? Bennis said. ?Drank some once, and it made me sick
as a dog. Wine?s better.?

?Not for oats. Not for barleycorn. Not for carrots, onions, cabbages.
Even grapes need water.? Dunk shook his head. ?How could it go dry so
quick? We?ve only been six days.?

?Wasn?t much water in there to start with, Dunk. Time was, I could piss
me bigger streams than this one.?

?Not/Dunk/ ,? said Dunk. ?I told you that.? He wondered why he bothered.
Bennis was a mean-mouthed man, and it pleased him to make mock. ?I?m
called Ser Duncan the Tall.?

?By who? Your bald pup?? He looked at Egg and laughed his chicken laugh.
?You?re taller than when you did for Pennytree, but you still look a
proper/Dunk/ to me.?

Dunk rubbed the back of his neck and stared down at the rocks. ?What
should we do??

?Fetch home the wines, and tell Ser Useless his stream?s gone dry. The
Standfast well still draws, he won?t go thirsty.?

?Don?t call him Useless.? Dunk was fond of the old knight. ?You sleep
beneath his roof, give him some respect.?

?You respect him for the both o? us, Dunk,? said Bennis. ?I?ll call him
what I will.?

The silvery gray planks creaked heavily as Dunk walked out onto the
bridge, to frown down at the sand and stones below. A few small brown
pools glistened amongst the rocks, he saw, none larger than his hand.
?Dead fish, there and there, see?? The smell of them reminded him of the
dead men at the crossroads.

?I see them, ser,? said Egg.

Dunk hopped down to the streambed, squatted on his heels, and turned
over a stone./Dry and warm on top, moist and muddy underneath./ ?The
water can?t have been gone long.? Standing, he flicked the stone sidearm
at the bank, where it crashed through a crumbling overhang in a puff of
dry brown earth. ?The soil?s cracked along the banks, but soft and muddy
in the middle. Those fish were alive yesterday.?

?Dunk the lunk, Pennytree used to call you. I recall.? Ser Bennis spat a
wad of sourleaf onto the rocks. It glistened red and slimy in the
sunlight. ?Lunks shouldn?t try and think, their heads is too bloody
thick for such.?

/Dunk the lunk, thick as a castle wall./From Ser Arlan the words had
been affectionate. He had been a kindly man, even in his scolding. In
the mouth of Ser Bennis of the Brown Shield, they sounded different.
?Ser Arlan?s two years dead,? Dunk said, ?and I?m called Ser Duncan the
Tall.? He was sorely tempted to put his fist through the brown knight?s
face and smash those red and rotten teeth to splinters. Bennis of the
Brown Shield might be a nasty piece of work, but Dunk had a good foot
and a half on him, and four stone as well. He might be a lunk, but he
was big. Sometimes it seemed as though he?d thumped his head on half the
doors in Westeros, not to mention every beam in every inn from Dorne up
to the Neck. Egg?s brother Aemon had measured him in Oldtown and found
he lacked an inch of seven feet, but that was half a year ago. He might
have grown since. Growing was the one thing that Dunk did really well,
the old man used to say.

He went back to Thunder and mounted up again. ?Egg, get on back to
Standfast with the wine. I?m going to see what?s happened to the water.?

?Streams dry up all the time,? said Bennis.

?I just want to have a look??

?Like how you looked under that rock? Shouldn?t go turning over rocks,
Lunk. Never know what might crawl out. We got us nice straw pallets back
at Standfast. There?s eggs more days than not, and not much to do but
listen to Ser Useless go on about how great he used to be. Leave it be,
I say. The stream went dry, that?s all.?

Dunk was nothing if not stubborn. ?Ser Eustace is waiting on his wine,?
he told Egg. ?Tell him where I went.?

?I will, ser.? Egg gave a tug on Maester?s lead. The mule twitched his
ears, but started off again at once./He wants to get those wine casks
off his back./ Dunk could not blame him.

The stream flowed north and east when it was flowing, so he turned
Thunder south and west. He had not ridden a dozen yards before Bennis
caught him. ?I best come see you don?t get hanged.? He pushed a fresh
sourleaf into his mouth. ?Past that clump o? sandwillows, the whole
right bank is spider land.?

?I?ll stay on our side.? Dunk wanted no trouble with the Lady of the
Coldmoat. At Standfast you heard ill things of her./The Red Widow,/ she
was called, for the husbands she had put into the ground. Old Sam Stoops
said she was a witch, a poisoner, and worse. Two years ago she had sent
her knights across the stream to seize an Osgrey man for stealing sheep.
?When m?lord rode to Coldmoat to demand him back, he was told to look
for him at the bottom of the moat,? Sam had said. ?She?d sewn poor Dake
in a bag o? rocks and sunk him. ?Twas after that Ser Eustace took Ser
Bennis into service, to keep them spiders off his lands.?

Thunder kept a slow, steady pace beneath the broiling sun. The sky was
blue and hard, with no hint of cloud anywhere to be seen. The course of
the stream meandered around rocky knolls and forlorn willows, through
bare brown hills and fields of dead and dying grain. An hour upstream
from the bridge, they found themselves riding on the edge of the small
Osgrey forest called Wat?s Wood. The greenery looked inviting from afar,
and filled Dunk?s head with thoughts of shady glens and chuckling
brooks, but when they reached the trees they found them thin and
scraggly, with drooping limbs. Some of the great oaks were shedding
leaves, and half the pines had turned as brown as Ser Bennis, with rings
of dead needles girdling their trunks./Worse and worse,/ thought
Dunk./One spark, and this will all go up like tinder./

For the moment, though, the tangled underbrush along the Chequy Water
was still thick with thorny vines, nettles, and tangles of briarwhite
and young willow. Rather than fight through it, they crossed the dry
streambed to the Coldmoat side, where the trees had been cleared away
for pasture. Amongst the parched brown grasses and faded wildflowers, a
few black-nosed sheep were grazing. ?Never knew an animal stupid as a
sheep,? Ser Bennis commented. ?Think they?re kin to you, lunk?? When
Dunk did not reply, he laughed his chicken laugh again.

Half a league farther south, they came upon the dam.

It was not large as such things went, but it looked strong. Two stout
wooden barricades had been thrown across the stream from bank to bank,
made from the trunks of trees with the bark still on. The space between
them was filled with rocks and earth and packed down hard. Behind the
dam the flow was creeping up the banks and spilling off into a ditch
that had been cut through Lady Webber?s fields. Dunk stood in his
stirrups for a better look. The glint of sun on water betrayed a score
of lesser channels, running off in all directions like a spider?s
web./They are stealing our stream./ The sight filled him with
indignation, especially when it dawned on him that the trees must surely
have been taken from Wat?s Wood.

?See what you went and did, lunk,? said Bennis. ?Couldn?t have it that
the stream dried up, no. Might be this starts with water, but it?ll end
with blood. Yours and mine, most like.? The brown knight drew his sword.
?Well, no help for it now. There?s your thrice-damned diggers. Best we
put some fear in them.? He raked his garron with his spurs and galloped
through the grass.

Dunk had no choice but to follow. Ser Arlan?s longsword rode his hip, a
good straight piece of steel./If these ditchdiggers have a lick of
sense, they?ll run./ Thunder?s hooves kicked up clods of dirt.

One man dropped his shovel at the sight of the oncoming knights, but
that was all. There were a score of the diggers, short and tall, old and
young, all baked brown by the sun. They formed a ragged line as Bennis
slowed, clutching their spades and picks. ?This is Coldmoat land,? one
shouted.

?And that?s an Osgrey stream.? Bennis pointed with his longsword. ?Who
put that damned dam up??

?Maester Cerrick made it,? said one young digger.

?No,? an older man insisted. ?The gray pup pointed some and said do this
and do that, but it were us who made it.?

?Then you can bloody well unmake it.?

The diggers? eyes were sullen and defiant. One wiped the sweat off his
brow with the back of his hand. No one spoke.

?You lot don?t hear so good,? said Bennis. ?Do I need to lop me off an
ear or two? Who?s first??

?This is Webber land.? The old digger was a scrawny fellow, stooped and
stubborn. ?You got no right to be here. Lop off any ears and m?lady will
drown you in a sack.?

Bennis rode closer. ?Don?t see no ladies here, just some mouthy
peasant.? He poked the digger?s bare brown chest with the point of his
sword, just hard enough to draw a bead of blood.

/He goes too far./?Put up your steel,? Dunk warned him. ?This is not his
doing. This maester set them to the task.?

?It?s for the crops, ser,? a jug-eared digger said. ?The wheat was
dying, the maester said. The pear trees, too.?

?Well, maybe them pear trees die, or maybe you do.?

?Your talk don?t frighten us,? said the old man.

?No?? Bennis made his longsword whistle, opening the old man?s cheek
from ear to jaw. ?I said, them pear trees die, or you do.? The digger?s
blood ran red down one side of his face.

/He should not have done that./Dunk had to swallow his rage. Bennis was
on his side in this. ?Get away from here,? he shouted at the diggers.
?Go back to your lady?s castle.?

/?Run,?/Ser Bennis urged.

Three of them let go of their tools and did just that, sprinting through
the grass. But another man, sunburned and brawny, hefted a pick and
said, ?There?s only two of them.?

?Shovels against swords is a fool?s fight, Jorgen,? the old man said,
holding his face. Blood trickled through his fingers. ?This won?t be the
end of this. Don?t think it will.?

?One more word, and I might be the end o? you.?

?We meant no harm to you,? Dunk said to the old man?s bloody face. ?All
we want is our water. Tell your lady that.?

?Oh, we?ll tell her, ser,? promised the brawny man, still clutching his
pick. ?That we will.?

 

On the way home they cut through the heart of Wat?s Wood, grateful for
the small measure of shade provided by the trees. Even so, they cooked.
Supposedly there were deer in the wood, but the only living things they
saw were flies. They buzzed about Dunk?s face as he rode, and crept
round Thunder?s eyes, irritating the big warhorse no end. The air was
still, suffocating./At least in Dorne the days were dry, and at night it
grew so cold I shivered in my cloak./ In the Reach the nights were
hardly cooler than the days, even this far north.

When ducking down beneath an overhanging limb, Dunk plucked a leaf and
crumpled it between his fingers. It fell apart like thousand-year-old
parchment in his hand. ?There was no need to cut that man,? he told Bennis.

?A tickle on the cheek was all it was, to teach him to mind his tongue.
I should of cut his bloody throat for him, only then the rest would of
run like rabbits, and we?d of had to ride down the lot o? them.?

?You?d kill twenty men?? Dunk said, incredulous.

?Twenty-two. That?s two more?n all your fingers and your toes, lunk. You
have to kill them all, else they go telling tales.? They circled round a
deadfall. ?We should of told Ser Useless the drought dried up his little
pissant stream.?

?Ser/Eustace/ . You would have lied to him.?

?Aye, and why not? Who?s to tell him any different? The flies?? Bennis
grinned a wet red grin. ?Ser Useless never leaves the tower, except to
see the boys down in the blackberries.?

?A sworn sword owes his lord the truth.?

?There?s truths and truths, lunk. Some don?t serve.? He spat. ?The gods
make droughts. A man can?t do a bloody buggering thing about the gods.
The Red Widow, though . . . we tell Useless that bitch dog took his
water, he?ll feel honor-bound to take it back. Wait and see. He?ll think
he?s got to/do something/ .?

?He should. Our smallfolk need that water for their crops.?

?/Our/smallfolk?? Ser Bennis brayed his laughter. ?Was I off having a
squat when Ser Useless made you his heir? How many smallfolk you figure
you got? Ten? And that?s counting Squinty Jeyne?s half-wit son that
don?t know which end o? the ax to hold. Go make knights o? every one,
and we?ll have half as many as the Widow, and never mind her squires and
her archers and the rest. You?d need both hands and both feet to count
all them, and your bald-head boy?s fingers and toes, too.?

?I don?t need toes to count.? Dunk was sick of the heat, the flies, and
the brown knight?s company./He may have ridden with Ser Arlan once, but
that was years and years ago. The man is grown mean and false and
craven./ He put his heels into his horse and trotted on ahead, to put
the smell behind him.

 

Standfast was a castle only by courtesy. Though it stood bravely atop a
rocky hill and could be seen for leagues around, it was no more than a
towerhouse. A partial collapse a few centuries ago had required some
rebuilding, so the north and west faces were pale gray stone above the
windows, and the old black stone below. Turrets had been added to the
roofline during the repair, but only on the sides that were rebuilt; at
the other two corners crouched ancient stone grotesques, so badly
abraded by wind and weather that it was hard to say what they had been.
The pinewood roof was flat, but badly warped and prone to leaks.

A crooked path led from the foot of the hill up to the tower, so narrow
it could only be ridden single file. Dunk led the way on the ascent,
with Bennis just behind. He could see Egg above them, standing on a jut
of rock in his floppy straw hat.

They reined up in front of the little daub-and-wattle stable that
nestled at the tower?s foot, half hidden under a misshapen heap of
purple moss. The old man?s gray gelding was in one of the stalls, next
to Maester. Egg and Sam Stoops had gotten the wine inside, it seemed.
Hens were wandering the yard. Egg trotted over. ?Did you find what
happened to the stream??

?The Red Widow?s dammed it up.? Dunk dismounted, and gave Thunder?s
reins to Egg. ?Don?t let him drink too much at once.?

?No, ser. I won?t.?

/?Boy,?/Ser Bennis called. ?You can take my horse as well.?

Egg gave him an insolent look. ?I?m not your squire.?

/That tongue of his will get him hurt one day,/Dunk thought. ?You?ll
take his horse, or you?ll get a clout in the ear.?

Egg made a sullen face, but did as he was bid. As he reached for the
bridle, though, Ser Bennis hawked and spat. A glob of glistening red
phlegm struck the boy between two toes. He gave the brown knight an icy
look. ?You spit on my foot, ser.?

Bennis clambered to the ground. ?Aye. Next time I?ll spit in your face.
I?ll have none o? your bloody tongue.?

Dunk could see the anger in the boy?s eyes. ?Tend to the horses, Egg,?
he said, before things got any worse. ?We need to speak with Ser Eustace.?

The only entrance into Standfast was through an oak-and-iron door twenty
feet above them. The bottom steps were blocks of smooth black stone, so
worn they were bowl-shaped in the middle. Higher up, they gave way to a
steep wooden stair that could be swung up like a drawbridge in times of
trouble. Dunk shooed the hens aside and climbed two steps at a time.

Standfast was bigger than it appeared. Its deep vaults and cellars
occupied a good part of the hill on which it perched. Aboveground, the
tower boasted four stories. The upper two had windows and balconies, the
lower two only arrow slits. It was cooler inside, but so dim that Dunk
had to let his eyes adjust. Sam Stoops? wife was on her knees by the
hearth, sweeping out the ashes. ?Is Ser Eustace above or below?? Dunk
asked her.

?Up, ser.? The old woman was so hunched that her head was lower than her
shoulders. ?He just come back from visiting the boys, down in the
blackberries.?

The boys were Eustace Osgrey?s sons: Edwyn, Harrold, Addam. Edwyn and
Harrold had been knights, Addam a young squire. They had died on the
Redgrass Field fifteen years ago, at the end of the Blackfyre Rebellion.
?They died good deaths, fighting bravely for the king,? Ser Eustace told
Dunk, ?and I brought them home and buried them among the blackberries.?
His wife was buried there as well. Whenever the old man breached a new
cask of wine, he went down the hill to pour each of his boys a libation.
?To the king!? he would call out loudly, just before he drank.

Ser Eustace?s bedchamber occupied the fourth floor of the tower, with
his solar just below. That was where he would be found, Dunk knew,
puttering amongst the chests and barrels. The solar?s thick gray walls
were hung with rusted weaponry and captured banners, prizes from battles
fought long centuries ago and now remembered by no one but Ser Eustace.
Half the banners were mildewed, and all were badly faded and covered
with dust, their once bright colors gone to gray and green.

Ser Eustace was scrubbing the dirt off a ruined shield with a rag when
Dunk came up the steps. Bennis followed fragrant at his heels. The old
knight?s eyes seemed to brighten a little at the sight of Dunk. ?My good
giant,? he declared, ?and brave Ser Bennis. Come have a look at this. I
found it in the bottom of that chest. A treasure, though fearfully
neglected.?

It was a shield, or what remained of one. That was little enough. Almost
half of it had been hacked away, and the rest was gray and splintered.
The iron rim was solid rust, and the wood was full of wormholes. A few
flakes of paint still clung to it, but too few to suggest a sigil.

?M?lord,? said Dunk. The Osgreys had not been lords for centuries, yet
it pleased Ser Eustace to be styled so, echoing as it did the past
glories of his House. ?What is it??

?The Little Lion?s shield.? The old man rubbed at the rim, and some
flakes of rust came off. ?Ser Wilbert Osgrey bore this at the battle
where he died. I am sure you know the tale.?

?No, m?lord,? said Bennis. ?We don?t, as it happens. The/Little/ Lion,
did you say? What, was he a dwarf or some such??

?Certainly not.? The old knight?s mustache quivered. ?Ser Wilbert was a
tall and powerful man, and a great knight. The name was given him in
childhood, as the youngest of five brothers. In his day there were still
seven kings in the Seven Kingdoms, and Highgarden and the Rock were oft
at war. The green kings ruled us then, the Gardeners. They were of the
blood of old Garth Greenhand, and a green hand upon a white field was
their kingly banner. Gyles the Third took his banners east, to war
against the Storm King, and Wilbert?s brothers all went with him, for in
those days the chequy lion always flew beside the green hand when the
King of the Reach went forth to battle.

?Yet it happened that while King Gyles was away, the King of the Rock
saw his chance to tear a bite out of the Reach, so he gathered up a host
of westermen and came down upon us. The Osgreys were the Marshalls of
the Northmarch, so it fell to the Little Lion to meet them. It was the
fourth King Lancel who led the Lannisters, it seems to me, or mayhaps
the fifth. Ser Wilbert blocked King Lancel?s path, and bid him
halt./?Come no farther,?/ he said./?You are not wanted here. I forbid
you to set foot upon the Reach.?/ But the Lannister ordered all his
banners forward.

?They fought for half a day, the gold lion and the chequy. The Lannister
was armed with a Valyrian sword that no common steel can match, so the
Little Lion was hard pressed, his shield in ruins. In the end, bleeding
from a dozen grievous wounds with his own blade broken in his hand, he
threw himself headlong at his foe. King Lancel cut him near in half, the
singers say, but as he died the Little Lion found the gap in the king?s
armor beneath his arm, and plunged his dagger home. When their king
died, the westermen turned back, and the Reach was saved.? The old man
stroked the broken shield as tenderly as if it had been a child.

?Aye, m?lord,? Bennis croaked, ?we could use a man like that today. Dunk
and me had a look at your stream, m?lord. Dry as a bone, and not from no
drought.?

The old man set the shield aside. ?Tell me.? He took a seat and
indicated that they should do the same. As the brown knight launched
into the tale, he sat listening intently, with his chin up and his
shoulders back, as upright as a lance.

In his youth, Ser Eustace Osgrey must have been the very picture of
chivalry, tall and broad and handsome. Time and grief had worked their
will on him, but he was still unbent, a big-boned, broad-shouldered,
barrel-chested man with features as strong and sharp as some old eagle.
His close-cropped hair had gone white as milk, but the thick mustache
that hid his mouth remained an ashy gray. His eyebrows were the same
color, the eyes beneath a paler shade of gray, and full of sadness.

They seemed to grow sadder still when Bennis touched upon the dam. ?That
stream has been known as the Chequy Water for a thousand years or more,?
the old knight said. ?I caught fish there as a boy, and my sons all did
the same. Alysanne liked to splash in the shallows on hot summer days
like this.? Alysanne had been his daughter, who had perished in the
spring. ?It was on the banks of the Chequy Water that I kissed a girl
for the first time. A cousin, she was, my uncle?s youngest daughter, of
the Osgreys of Leafy Lake. They are all gone now, even her.? His
mustache quivered. ?This cannot be borne, sers. The woman will not have
my water. She will not have my/chequy/ water.?

?Dam?s built strong, m?lord,? Ser Bennis warned. ?Too strong for me and
Ser Dunk to pull down in an hour, even with the bald-head boy to help.
We?ll need ropes and picks and axes, and a dozen men. And that?s just
for the work, not for the fighting.?

Ser Eustace stared at the Little Lion?s shield.

Dunk cleared his throat. ?M?lord, as to that, when we came upon the
diggers, well . . .?

?Dunk, don?t trouble m?lord with trifles,? said Bennis. ?I taught one
fool a lesson, that was all.?

Ser Eustace looked up sharply. ?What sort of lesson??

?With my sword, as it were. A little claret on his cheek, that?s all it
were, m?lord.?

The old knight looked long at him. ?That . . . that was ill considered,
ser. The woman has a spider?s heart. She murdered three of her husbands.
And all her brothers died in swaddling clothes. Five, there were. Or
six, mayhaps, I don?t recall. They stood between her and the castle. She
would whip the skin off any peasant who displeased her, I do not doubt,
but for/you/ to cut one . . . no, she will not suffer such an insult.
Make no mistake. She will come for you, as she came for Lem.?

?Dake, m?lord,? Ser Bennis said. ?Begging your lordly pardon, you knew
him and I never did, but his name were Dake.?

?If it please m?lord, I could go to Goldengrove and tell Lord Rowan of
this dam,? said Dunk. Rowan was the old knight?s liege lord. The Red
Widow held her lands of him as well.

?Rowan? No, look for no help there. Lord Rowan?s sister wed Lord Wyman?s
cousin Wendell, so he is kin to the Red Widow. Besides, he loves me not.
Ser Duncan, on the morrow you must make the rounds of all my villages,
and roust out every able-bodied man of fighting age. I am old, but I am
not dead. The woman will soon find that the chequy lion still has claws!?

/Two,/Dunk thought glumly,/and I am one of them./

 

Ser Eustace?s lands supported three small villages, none more than a
handful of hovels, sheepfolds, and pigs. The largest boasted a thatched
one-room sept with crude pictures of the Seven scratched upon the walls
in charcoal. Mudge, a stoop-backed old swineherd who?d once been to
Oldtown, led devotions there every seventh day. Twice a year a real
septon came through to forgive sins in the Mother?s name. The smallfolk
were glad of the forgiveness, but hated the septon?s visits all the
same, since they were required to feed him.

They seemed no more pleased by the sight of Dunk and Egg. Dunk was known
in the villages, if only as Ser Eustace?s new knight, but not so much as
a cup of water was offered him. Most of the men were in the fields, so
it was largely women and children who crept out of the hovels at their
coming, along with a few grandfathers too infirm for work. Egg bore the
Osgrey banner, the chequy lion green and gold, rampant upon its field of
white. ?We come from Standfast with Ser Eustace?s summons,? Dunk told
the villagers. ?Every able-bodied man between the ages of fifteen and
fifty is commanded to assemble at the tower on the morrow.?

?Is it war?? asked one thin woman, with two children hiding behind her
skirts and a babe sucking at her breast. ?Is the black dragon come again??

?There are no dragons in this, black or red,? Dunk told her. ?This is
between the chequy lion and the spiders. The Red Widow has taken your
water.?

The woman nodded, though she looked askance when Egg took off his hat to
fan his face. ?That boy got no hair. He sick??

?It?s/shaved/ ,? said Egg. He put the hat back on, turned Maester?s
head, and rode off slowly.

/The boy is in a prickly mood today./He had hardly said a word since
they set out. Dunk gave Thunder a touch of the spur and soon caught the
mule. ?Are you angry that I did not take your part against Ser Bennis
yesterday?? he asked his sullen squire, as they made for the next
village. ?I like the man no more than you, but he/is/ a knight. You
should speak to him with courtesy.?

?I?m your squire, not his,? the boy said. ?He?s dirty and mean-mouthed,
and he pinches me.?

/If he had an inkling who you were, he?d piss himself before he laid a
finger on you./?He used to pinch me, too.? Dunk had forgotten that, till
Egg?s words brought it back. Ser Bennis and Ser Arlan had been among a
party of knights hired by a Dornish merchant to see him safe from
Lannisport to the Prince?s Pass. Dunk had been no older than Egg, though
taller./He would pinch me under the arm so hard he?d leave a bruise. His
fingers felt like iron pincers, but I never told Ser Arlan./ One of the
other knights had vanished near Stoney Sept, and it was bruited about
that Bennis had gutted him in a quarrel. ?If he pinches you again, tell
me and I?ll end it. Till then, it does not cost you much to tend his horse.?

?Someone has to,? Egg agreed. ?Bennis never brushes him. He never cleans
his stall. He hasn?t even/named/ him!?

?Some knights never name their horses,? Dunk told him. ?That way, when
they die in battle, the grief is not so hard to bear. There are always
more horses to be had, but it?s hard to lose a faithful friend.?/Or so
the old man said, but he never took his own counsel. He named every
horse he ever owned./ So had Dunk. ?We?ll see how many men turn up at
the tower . . . but whether it?s five or fifty, you?ll need to do for
them as well.?

Egg looked indignant. ?I have to serve/smallfolk/ ??

?Not serve. Help. We need to turn them into fighters.?/If the Widow
gives us time enough./ ?If the gods are good, a few will have done some
soldiering before, but most will be green as summer grass, more used to
holding hoes than spears. Even so, a day may come when our lives depend
on them. How old were you when you first took up a sword??

?I was little, ser. The sword was made from wood.?

?Common boys fight with wooden swords, too, only theirs are sticks and
broken branches. Egg, these men may seem fools to you. They won?t know
the proper names for bits of armor, or the arms of the great Houses, or
which king it was who abolished the lord?s right to the first night . .
. but treat them with respect all the same. You are a squire born of
noble blood, but you are still a boy. Most of them will be men grown. A
man has his pride, no matter how lowborn he may be. You would seem just
as lost and stupid in their villages. And if you doubt that, go hoe a
row and shear a sheep, and tell me the names of all the weeds and
wildflowers in Wat?s Wood.?

The boy considered for a moment. ?I could teach them the arms of the
great Houses, and how Queen Alysanne convinced King Jaehaerys to abolish
the first night. And they could teach me which weeds are best for making
poisons, and whether those green berries are safe to eat.?

?They could,? Dunk agreed, ?but before you get to King Jaehaerys, you?d
best help us teach them how to use a spear. And don?t go eating anything
that Maester won?t.?

 

The next day a dozen would-be warriors found their way to Standfast to
assemble among the chickens. One was too old, two were too young, and
one skinny boy turned out to be a skinny girl. Those Dunk sent back to
their villages, leaving eight: three Wats, two Wills, a Lem, a Pate, and
Big Rob the lackwit./A sorry lot,/ he could not help but think. The
strapping handsome peasant boys who won the hearts of highborn maidens
in the songs were nowhere to be seen. Each man was dirtier than the
last. Lem was fifty if he was a day, and Pate had weepy eyes; they were
the only two who had ever soldiered before. Both had been gone with Ser
Eustace and his sons to fight in the Blackfyre Rebellion. The other six
were as green as Dunk had feared. All eight had lice. Two of the Wats
were brothers. ?Guess your mother didn?t know no other name,? Bennis
said, cackling.

As far as arms went, they brought a scythe, three hoes, an old knife,
some stout wooden clubs. Lem had a sharpened stick that might serve for
a spear, and one of the Wills allowed that he was good at chucking
rocks. ?Well and good,? Bennis said, ?we got us a bloody trebuchet.?
After that the man was known as Treb.

?Are any of you skilled with a longbow?? Dunk asked them.

The men scuffed at the dirt, while hens pecked the ground around them.
Pate of the weepy eyes finally answered. ?Begging your pardon, ser, but
m?lord don?t permit us longbows. Osgrey deers is for the chequy lions,
not the likes o? us.?

?We will get swords and helms and chainmail?? the youngest of the three
Wats wanted to know.

?Why, sure you will,? said Bennis, ?just as soon as you kill one o? the
Widow?s knights and strip his bloody corpse. Make sure you stick your
arm up his horse?s arse, too, that?s where you?ll find his silver.? He
pinched young Wat beneath his arm until the lad squealed in pain, then
marched the whole lot of them off to Wat?s Wood to cut some spears.

When they came back, they had eight fire-hardened spears of wildly
unequal length, and crude shields of woven branches. Ser Bennis had made
himself a spear as well, and he showed them how to thrust with the point
and use the shaft to parry . . . and where to put the point to kill.
?The belly and the throat are best, I find.? He pounded his fist against
his chest. ?Right there?s the heart, that will do the job as well.
Trouble is, the ribs is in the way. The belly?s nice and soft. Gutting?s
slow, but certain. Never knew a man to live when his guts was hanging
out. Now if some fool goes and turns his back on you, put your point
between his shoulder blades or through his kidney. That?s here. They
don?t live long once you prick ?em in the kidney.?

Having three Wats in the company caused confusion when Bennis was trying
to tell them what to do. ?We should give them village names, ser,? Egg
suggested, ?like Ser Arlan of Pennytree, your old master.? That might
have worked, only their villages had no names, either. ?Well,? said Egg,
?we could call them for their crops, ser.? One village sat amongst bean
fields, one planted mostly barleycorn, and the third cultivated rows of
cabbages, carrots, onions, turnips, and melons. No one wanted to be a
Cabbage or a Turnip, so the last lot became the Melons. They ended up
with four Barleycorns, two Melons, and two Beans. As the brothers Wat
were both Barleycorns, some further distinction was required. When the
younger brother made mention of once having fallen down the village
well, Bennis dubbed him ?Wet Wat,? and that was that. The men were
thrilled to have been given ?lord?s names,? save for Big Rob, who could
not seem to remember whether he was a Bean or a Barleycorn.

Once all of them had names and spears, Ser Eustace emerged from
Standfast to address them. The old knight stood outside the tower door,
wearing his mail and plate beneath a long woolen surcoat that age had
turned more yellow than white. On front and back it bore the chequy
lion, sewn in little squares of green and gold. ?Lads,? he said, ?you
all remember Dake. The Red Widow threw him in a sack and drowned him.
She took his life, and now she thinks to take our water, too, the Chequy
Water that nourishes our crops . . . but she will not!? He raised his
sword above his head. ?For Osgrey!? he said ringingly. ?For Standfast!?

/?Osgrey!?/Dunk echoed. Egg and the recruits took up the shout./?Ogsrey!
Osgrey! For Standfast!?/

Dunk and Bennis drilled the little company amongst the pigs and
chickens, while Ser Eustace watched from the balcony above. Sam Stoops
had stuffed some old sacks with soiled straw. Those became their foes.
The recruits began practicing their spear work as Bennis bellowed at
them. ?Stick and twist and rip it free. Stick and twist and rip, but/get
the damned thing out!/ You?ll be wanting it soon enough for the next
one. Too slow, Treb, too damned slow. If you can?t do it quicker, go
back to chucking rocks. Lem, get your weight behind your thrust. There?s
a boy. And in and out and in and out. Fuck ?em with it, that?s the way,
in and out, rip ?em, rip ?em,/rip ?em./ ?

When the sacks had been torn to pieces by half a thousand spear thrusts
and all the straw spilled out onto the ground, Dunk donned his mail and
plate and took up a wooden sword to see how the men would fare against a
livelier foe.

Not too well, was the answer. Only Treb was quick enough to get a spear
past Dunk?s shield, and he only did it once. Dunk turned one clumsy
lurching thrust after another, pushed their spears aside, and bulled in
close. If his sword had been steel instead of pine, he would have slain
each of them half a dozen times. ?You?re/dead/ once I get past your
point,? he warned them, hammering at their legs and arms to drive the
lesson home. Treb and Lem and Wet Wat soon learned how to give ground,
at least. Big Rob dropped his spear and ran, and Bennis had to chase him
down and drag him back in tears. The end of the afternoon saw the lot of
them all bruised and battered, with fresh blisters rising on their
callused hands from where they gripped the spears. Dunk bore no marks
himself, but he was half drowned by sweat by the time Egg helped him
peel his armor off.

As the sun was going down, Dunk marched their little company down into
the cellar and forced them all to have a bath, even those who?d had one
just last winter. Afterward Sam Stoops? wife had bowls of stew for all,
thick with carrots, onions, and barley. The men were bone tired, but to
hear them talk every one would soon be twice as deadly as a Kingsguard
knight. They could hardly wait to prove their valor. Ser Bennis egged
them on by telling them of the joys of the soldier?s life; loot and
women, chiefly. The two old hands agreed with him. Lem had brought back
a knife and a pair of fine boots from the Blackfyre Rebellion, to hear
him tell; the boots were too small for him to wear, but he had them
hanging on his wall. And Pate could not say enough about some of the
camp followers he?d known following the dragon.

Sam Stoops had set them up with eight straw pallets in the undercroft,
so once their bellies were filled they all went off to sleep. Bennis
lingered long enough to give Dunk a look of disgust. ?Ser Useless should
of fucked a few more peasant wenches while he still had a bit o? sap
left in them old sad balls o? his,? he said. ?If he?d sown himself a
nice crop o? bastard boys back then, might be we?d have some soldiers now.?

?They seem no worse than any other peasant levy.? Dunk had marched with
a few such while squiring for Ser Arlan.

?Aye,? Ser Bennis said. ?In a fortnight they might stand their own,
?gainst some other lot o? peasants. Knights, though?? He shook his head,
and spat.

 

Standfast?s well was in the undercellar, in a dank chamber walled in
stone and earth. It was there that Sam Stoops? wife soaked and scrubbed
and beat the clothes before carrying them up to the roof to dry. The big
stone washtub was also used for baths. Bathing required drawing water
from the well bucket by bucket, heating it over the hearth in a big iron
kettle, emptying the kettle into the tub, then starting the whole
process once again. It took four buckets to fill the kettle, and three
kettles to fill the tub. By the time the last kettle was hot the water
from the first had cooled to lukewarm. Ser Bennis had been heard to say
that the whole thing was too much bloody bother, which was why he
crawled with lice and fleas and smelled like a bad cheese.

Dunk at least had Egg to help him when he felt in dire need of a good
wash, as he did tonight. The lad drew the water in a glum silence, and
hardly spoke as it was heating. ?Egg?? Dunk asked as the last kettle was
coming to a boil. ?Is aught amiss?? When Egg made no reply, he said,
?Help me with the kettle.?

Together they wrestled it from hearth to tub, taking care not to splash
themselves. ?Ser,? the boy said, ?what do you think Ser Eustace means to
do??

?Tear down the dam, and fight off the Widow?s men if they try to stop
us.? He spoke loudly, so as to be heard above the splashing of the
bathwater. Steam rose in a white curtain as they poured, bringing a
flush to his face.

?Their shields are woven wood, ser. A lance could punch right through
them, or a crossbow bolt.?

?We may find some bits of armor for them, when they?re ready.? That was
the best they could hope for.

?They might be killed, ser. Wet Wat is still half a boy. Will Barleycorn
is to be married the next time the septon comes. And Big Rob doesn?t
even know his left foot from his right.?

Dunk let the empty kettle thump down onto the hard-packed earthen floor.
?Roger of Pennytree was younger than Wet Wat when he died on the
Redgrass Field. There were men in your father?s host who?d been just
been married, too, and other men who?d never even kissed a girl. There
were hundreds who didn?t know their left foot from their right, maybe
thousands.?

?That was/different,/ ? Egg insisted. ?That was war.?

?So is this. The same thing, only smaller.?

?Smaller and/stupider/ , ser.?

?That?s not for you or me to say,? Dunk told him. ?It?s their duty to go
to war when Ser Eustace summons them . . . and to die, if need be.?

?Then we shouldn?t have named them, ser. It will only make the grief
harder for us when they die.? He screwed up his face. ?If we used my boot??

?No.? Dunk stood on one leg to pull his own boot off.

?Yes, but my father??

?No.? The second boot went the way of the first.

?We??

?No.? Dunk pulled his sweat-stained tunic up over his head and tossed it
at Egg. ?Ask Sam Stoops? wife to wash that for me.?

?I will, ser, but??

?No, I said. Do you need a clout in the ear to help you hear better?? He
unlaced his breeches. Underneath was only him; it was too hot for
smallclothes. ?It?s good that you?re concerned for Wat and Wat and Wat
and the rest of them, but the boot is only meant for dire need.?/How
many eyes does Lord Bloodraven have? A thousand eyes, and one./ ?What
did your father tell you, when he sent you off to squire for me??

?To keep my hair shaved or dyed, and tell no man my true name,? the boy
said, with obvious reluctance.

Egg had served Dunk for a good year and a half, though some days it
seemed like twenty. They had climbed the Prince?s Pass together and
crossed the deep sands of Dorne, both red and white. A poleboat had
taken them down the Greenblood to the Planky Town, where they took
passage for Oldtown on the galleas/White Lady/ . They had slept in
stables, inns, and ditches, broken bread with holy brothers, whores, and
mummers, and chased down a hundred puppet shows. Egg had kept Dunk?s
horse groomed, his longsword sharp, his mail free of rust. He had been
as good a companion as any man could wish for, and the hedge knight had
come to think of him almost as a little brother.

/He isn?t, though./This egg had been hatched of dragons, not of
chickens./Egg/ might be a hedge knight?s squire, but Aegon of House
Targaryen was the fourth and youngest son of Maekar, Prince of
Summerhall, himself the fourth son of the late King Daeron the Good, the
Second of His Name, who?d sat the Iron Throne for five-and-twenty years
until the Great Spring Sickness took him off.

?So far as most folk are concerned, Aegon Targaryen went back to
Summerhall with his brother Daeron after the tourney at Ashford Meadow,?
Dunk reminded the boy. ?Your father did not want it known that you were
wandering the Seven Kingdoms with some hedge knight. So let?s hear no
more about your boot.?

A look was all the answer that he got. Egg had big eyes, and somehow his
shaven head made them look even larger. In the dimness of the lamplit
cellar they looked black, but in better light their true color could be
seen: deep and dark and purple./Valyrian eyes,/ thought Dunk. In
Westeros, few but the blood of the dragon had eyes that color, or hair
that shone like beaten gold and strands of silver woven all together.

When they?d been poling down the Greenblood, the orphan girls had made a
game of rubbing Egg?s shaven head for luck. It made the boy blush redder
than a pomegranate. ?Girls are so/stupid/ ,? he would say. ?The next one
who touches me is going into the river.? Dunk had to tell him,
?Then/I?ll/ be touching you. I?ll give you such a clout in the ear
you?ll be hearing bells for a moon?s turn.? That only goaded the boy to
further insolence. ?Better bells than stupid/girls/ ,? he insisted, but
he never threw anyone into the river.

Dunk stepped into the tub and eased himself down until the water covered
him up to his chin. It was still scalding hot on top, though cooler
farther down. He clenched his teeth to keep from yelping. If he did the
boy would laugh. Egg/liked/ his bathwater scalding hot.

?Do you need more water boiled, ser??

?This will serve.? Dunk rubbed at his arms and watched the dirt come off
in long gray clouds. ?Fetch me the soap. Oh, and the long-handled scrub
brush, too.? Thinking about Egg?s hair had made him remember that his
own was filthy. He took a deep breath and slid down beneath the water to
give it a good soak. When he emerged again, sloshing, Egg was standing
beside the tub with the soap and long-handled horsehair brush in hand.
?You have hairs on your cheek,? Dunk observed, as he took the soap from
him. ?Two of them. There, below your ear. Make sure you get them the
next time you shave your head.?

?I will, ser.? The boy seemed pleased by the discovery.

/No doubt he thinks a bit of beard makes him a man./Dunk had thought the
same when he first found some fuzz growing on his upper lip./I tried to
shave with my dagger, and almost nicked my nose off./ ?Go and get some
sleep now,? he told Egg. ?I won?t have any more need of you till morning.?

It took a long while to scrub all the dirt and sweat away. Afterward, he
put the soap aside, stretched out as much as he was able, and closed his
eyes. The water had cooled by then. After the savage heat of the day, it
was a welcome relief. He soaked till his feet and fingers were all
wrinkled up and the water had gone gray and cold, and only then
reluctantly climbed out.

Though he and Egg had been given thick straw pallets down in the cellar,
Dunk preferred to sleep up on the roof. The air was fresher there, and
sometimes there was a breeze. It was not as though he need have much
fear of rain. The next time it rained on them up there would be the first.

Egg was asleep by the time Dunk reached the roof. He lay on his back
with his hands behind his head and stared up at the sky. The stars were
everywhere, thousands and thousands of them. It reminded him of a night
at Ashford Meadow, before the tourney started. He had seen a falling
star that night. Falling stars were supposed to bring you luck, so he?d
told Tanselle to paint it on his shield, but Ashford had been anything
but lucky for him. Before the tourney ended, he had almost lost a hand
and a foot, and three good men had lost their lives./I gained a squire,
though. Egg was with me when I rode away from Ashford. That was the only
good thing to come of all that happened./

He hoped that no stars fell tonight.

 

There were red mountains in the distance and white sands beneath his
feet. Dunk was digging, plunging a spade into the dry hot earth, and
flinging the fine sand back over his shoulder. He was making a hole./A
grave,/ he thought,/a grave for hope./ A trio of Dornish knights stood
watching, making mock of him in quiet voices. Farther off the merchants
waited with their mules and wayns and sand sledges. They wanted to be
off, but he could not leave until he?d buried Chestnut. He would not
leave his old friend to the snakes and scorpions and sand dogs.

The stot had died on the long thirsty crossing between the Prince?s Pass
and Vaith, with Egg upon his back. His front legs just seemed to fold up
under him, and he knelt right down, rolled onto his side, and died. His
carcass sprawled beside the hole. Already it was stiff. Soon it would
begin to smell.

Dunk was weeping as he dug, to the amusement of the Dornish knights.
?Water is precious in the waste,? one said, ?you ought not to waste it,
ser.? The other chuckled and said, ?Why do you weep? It was only a
horse, and a poor one.?

/Chestnut,/Dunk thought, digging,/his name was Chestnut, and he bore me
on his back for years, and never bucked or bit./ The old stot had looked
a sorry thing beside the sleek sand steeds that the Dornishmen were
riding, with their elegant heads, long necks, and flowing manes, but he
had given all he had to give.

?Weeping for a swaybacked stot?? Ser Arlan said, in his old man?s voice.
?Why, lad, you never wept for me, who put you on his back.? He gave a
little laugh, to show he meant no harm by the reproach. ?That?s Dunk the
lunk, thick as a castle wall.?

?He shed no tears for me, either,? said Baelor Breakspear from the
grave, ?Though I was his prince, the hope of Westeros. The gods never
meant for me to die so young.?

?My father was only nine-and-thirty,? said Prince Valarr. ?He had it in
him to be a great king, the greatest since Aegon the Dragon.? He looked
at Dunk with cool blue eyes. ?Why would the gods take him, and
leave/you/ ?? The Young Prince had his father?s light brown hair, but a
streak of silver-gold ran through it.

/You are dead,/Dunk wanted to scream,/you are all three dead, why won?t
you leave me be?/ Ser Arlan had died of a chill, Prince Baelor of the
blow his brother dealt him during Dunk?s trial of seven, his son Valarr
during the Great Spring Sickness./I am not to blame for that. We were in
Dorne, we never even knew./

?You are mad,? the old man told him. ?We will dig no hole for you, when
you kill yourself with this folly. In the deep sands a man must hoard
his water.?

?Begone with you, Ser Duncan,? Valarr said. ?Begone.?

Egg helped him with the digging. The boy had no spade, only his hands,
and the sand flowed back into the grave as fast as they could fling it
out. It was like trying to dig a hole in the sea./I have to keep
digging,/ Dunk told himself, though his back and shoulders ached from
the effort./I have to bury him down deep where the sand dogs cannot find
him. I have to . . ./

?. . . die?? said Big Rob the simpleton from the bottom of the grave.
Lying there, so still and cold, with a ragged red wound gaping in his
belly, he did not look very big at all.

Dunk stopped and stared at him. ?You?re not dead. You?re down sleeping
in the cellar.? He looked to Ser Arlan for help. ?Tell him, ser,? he
pleaded, ?tell him to get out of the grave.?

Only it was not Ser Arlan of Pennytree standing over him at all, it was
Ser Bennis of the Brown Shield. The brown knight only cackled. ?Dunk the
lunk,? he said, ?gutting?s slow, but certain. Never knew a man to live
with his entrails hanging out.? Red froth bubbled on his lips. He turned
and spat, and the white sands drank it down. Treb was standing behind
him with an arrow in his eye, weeping slow red tears. And there was Wet
Wat, too, his head cut near in half, with old Lem and red-eyed Pate and
all the rest. They had all been chewing sourleaf with Bennis, Dunk
thought at first, but then he realized that it was blood trickling from
their mouths./Dead,/ he thought,/all dead,/ and the brown knight brayed.
?Aye, so best get busy. You?ve more graves to dig, lunk. Eight for them
and one for me and one for old Ser Useless, and one last one for your
bald-head boy.?

The spade slipped from Dunk?s hands. ?Egg,? he cried, ?run! We have
to/run!/ ? But the sands were giving way beneath their feet. When the
boy tried to scramble from the hole, its crumbling sides gave way and
collapsed. Dunk saw the sands wash over Egg, burying him as he opened
his mouth to shout. He tried to fight his way to him, but the sands were
rising all around him, pulling him down into the grave, filling his
mouth, his nose, his eyes . . .

 

Come the break of day, Ser Bennis set about teaching their recruits to
form a shield wall. He lined the eight of them up shoulder to shoulder,
with their shields touching and their spear points poking through like
long sharp wooden teeth. Then Dunk and Egg mounted up and charged them.

Maester refused to go within ten feet of the spears and stopped
abruptly, but Thunder had been trained for this. The big warhorse
pounded straight ahead, gathering speed. Hens ran beneath his legs and
flapped away screeching. Their panic must have been contagious. Once
more Big Rob was the first to drop his spear and run, leaving a gap in
the middle of the wall. Instead of closing up, Standfast?s other
warriors joined the flight. Thunder trod upon their discarded shields
before Dunk could rein him up. Woven branches cracked and splintered
beneath his iron-shod hooves. Ser Bennis rattled off a pungent string of
curses as chickens and peasants scattered in all directions. Egg fought
manfully to hold his laughter in, but finally lost the battle.

?Enough of that.? Dunk drew Thunder to a halt, unfastened his helm, and
tore it off. ?If they do that in a battle, it will get the whole lot of
them killed.?/And you and me as well, most like./ The morning was
already hot, and he felt as soiled and sticky as if he?d never bathed at
all. His head was pounding, and he could not forget the dream he dreamed
the night before./It never happened that way,/ he tried to tell
himself./It wasn?t like that./ Chestnut had died on the long dry ride to
Vaith, that part was true. He and Egg rode double until Egg?s brother
gave them Maester. The rest of it, though . . .

/I never wept. I might have wanted to, but I never did./He had wanted to
bury the horse as well, but the Dornishmen would not wait. ?Sand dogs
must eat and feed their pups,? one of the Dornish knights told him as he
helped Dunk strip the stot of saddle and bridle. ?His flesh will feed
the dogs or feed the sands. In a year, his bones will be scoured clean.
This is Dorne, my friend.? Remembering, Dunk could not help but wonder
who would feed on Wat?s flesh, and Wat?s, and Wat?s./Maybe there are
chequy fish down beneath the Chequy Water./

He rode Thunder back to the tower and dismounted. ?Egg, help Ser Bennis
round them up and get them back here.? He shoved his helm at Egg and
strode to the steps.

Ser Eustace met him in the dimness of his solar. ?That was not well done.?

?No, m?lord,? said Dunk. ?They will not serve.?/A sworn sword owes his
liege service and obedience, but this is madness./

?It was their first time. Their fathers and brothers were as bad or
worse when they began their training. My sons worked with them, before
we went to help the king. Every day, for a good fortnight. They made
soldiers of them.?

?And when the battle came, m?lord?? Dunk asked. ?How did they fare then?
How many of them came home with you??

The old knight looked long at him. ?Lem,? he said at last, ?and Pate,
and Dake. Dake foraged for us. He was as fine a forager as I ever knew.
We never marched on empty bellies. Three came back, ser. Three and me.?
His mustache quivered. ?It may take longer than a fortnight.?

?M?lord,? said Dunk, ?the woman could be here upon the morrow, with all
her men.?/They are good lads,/ he thought,/but they will soon be dead
lads, if they go up against the knights of Coldmoat./ ?There must be
some other way.?

?Some other way.? Ser Eustace ran his fingers lightly across the Little
Lion?s shield. ?I will have no justice from Lord Rowan, nor this king .
. .? He grasped Dunk by the forearm. ?It comes to me that in days gone
by, when the green kings ruled, you could pay a man a blood price if you
had slain one of his animals or peasants.?

?A blood price?? Dunk was dubious.

?Some other way, you said. I have some coin laid by. It was only a
little claret on the cheek, Ser Bennis says. I could pay the man a
silver stag, and three to the woman for the insult. I could, and would .
. . if she would take the dam down.? The old man frowned. ?I cannot go
to her, however. Not at Coldmoat.? A fat black fly buzzed around his
head and lighted on his arm. ?The castle was ours once. Did you know
that, Ser Duncan??

?Aye, m?lord.? Sam Stoops had told him.

?For a thousand years before the Conquest, we were the Marshalls of the
Northmarch. A score of lesser lordlings did us fealty, and a hundred
landed knights. We had four castles then, and watchtowers on the hills
to warn of the coming of our enemies. Coldmoat was the greatest of our
seats. Lord Perwyn Osgrey raised it. Perwyn the Proud, they called him.

?After the Field of Fire, Highgarden passed from kings to stewards, and
the Osgreys dwindled and diminished. ?Twas Aegon?s son King Maegor who
took Coldmoat from us, when Lord Ormond Osgrey spoke out against his
supression of the Stars and Swords, as the Poor Fellows and the
Warrior?s Sons were called.? His voice had grown hoarse. ?There is a
chequy lion carved into the stone above the gates of Coldmoat. My father
showed it to me, the first time he took me with him to call on old
Reynard Webber. I showed it to my own sons in turn. Addam . . . Addam
served at Coldmoat, as a page and squire, and a . . . a certain . . .
fondness grew up between him and Lord Wyman?s daughter. So one winter
day I donned my richest raiment and went to Lord Wyman to propose a
marriage. His refusal was courteous, but as I left I heard him laughing
with Ser Lucas Inchfield. I never returned to Coldmoat after that, save
once, when that woman presumed to carry off one of mine own. When they
told me to seek for poor Lem at the bottom of the moat??

?Dake,? said Dunk. ?Bennis says his name was Dake.?

?Dake?? The fly was creeping down his sleeve, pausing to rub its legs
together the way flies did. Ser Eustace shooed it away, and rubbed his
lip beneath his mustache. ?Dake. That was what I said. A staunch fellow,
I recall him well. He foraged for us, during the war. We never marched
on empty bellies. When Ser Lucas informed me of what had been done to my
poor Dake, I swore a holy vow that I would never set foot inside that
castle again, unless to take possession. So you see, I cannot go there,
Ser Duncan. Not to pay the blood price, or for any other reason.
I/cannot/ .?

Dunk understood. ?I could go, m?lord. I swore no vows.?

?You are a good man, Ser Duncan. A brave knight, and true.? Ser Eustace
gave Dunk?s arm a squeeze. ?Would that the gods had spared my Alysanne.
You are the sort of man I had always hoped that she might marry. A true
knight, Ser Duncan. A true knight.?

Dunk was turning red. ?I will tell Lady Webber what you said, about the
blood price, but . . .?

?You will save Ser Bennis from Dake?s fate. I know it. I am no mean
judge of men, and you are the true steel. You will give them pause, ser.
The very sight of you. When that woman sees that Standfast has such a
champion, she may well take down that dam of her own accord.?

Dunk did not know what to say to that. He knelt. ?M?lord. I will go upon
the morrow, and do the best I can.?

?On the morrow.? The fly came circling back, and lit upon Ser Eustace?s
left hand. He raised his right and smashed it flat. ?Yes. On the morrow.?

 

?/Another/bath?? Egg said, dismayed. ?You washed yesterday.?

?And then I spent a day in armor, swimming in my sweat. Close your lips
and fill the kettle.?

?You washed the night Ser Eustace took us into service,? Egg pointed
out. ?And last night, and now. That?s/three times/ , ser.?

?I need to treat with a highborn lady. Do you want me to turn up before
her high seat smelling like Ser Bennis??

?You would have to roll in a tub of Maester?s droppings to smell as bad
as that, ser.? Egg filled the kettle. ?Sam Stoops says the castellan at
Coldmoat is as big as you are. Lucas Inchfield is his name, but he?s
called the Longinch for his size. Do you think he?s as big as you are, ser??

?No.? It had been years since Dunk had met anyone as tall as he was. He
took the kettle and hung it above the fire.

?Will you fight him??

?No.? Dunk almost wished it had been otherwise. He might not be the
greatest fighter in the realm, but size and strength could make up for
many lacks./Not for a lack of wits, though./ He was no good with words,
and worse with women. This giant Lucas Longinch did not daunt him half
so much as the prospect of facing the Red Widow. ?I?m going to talk to
the Red Widow, that?s all.?

?What will you tell her, ser??

?That she has to take the dam down.?/You must take down your dam,
m?lady, or else . . ./ ?Ask her to take down the dam, I mean.?/Please
give back our chequy water/ . ?If it pleases her.?/A little water,
m?lady, if it please you./ Ser Eustace would not want him to beg./How do
I say it, then?/

The water soon begun to steam and bubble. ?Help me lug this to the tub,?
Dunk told the boy. Together they lifted the kettle from the hearth and
crossed the cellar to the big wooden tub. ?I don?t know how to talk with
highborn ladies,? he confessed as they were pouring. ?We both might have
been killed in Dorne, on account of what I said to Lady Vaith.?

?Lady Vaith was mad,? Egg reminded him, ?but you could have been more
gallant. Ladies like it when you?re gallant. If you were to rescue the
Red Widow the way you rescued that puppet girl from Aerion . . .?

?Aerion?s in Lys, and the Widow?s not in want of rescuing.? He did not
want to talk of Tanselle./Tanselle Too-Tall was her name, but she was
not too tall for me./

?Well,? the boy said, ?some knights sing gallant songs to their ladies,
or play them tunes upon a lute.?

?I have no lute.? Dunk looked morose. ?And that night I drank too much
in the Planky Town, you told me I sang like an ox in a mud wallow.?

?I had forgotten, ser.?

?How could you forget??

?You told me to forget, ser,? said Egg, all innocence. ?You told me I?d
get a clout in the ear the next time I mentioned it.?

?There will be no singing.? Even if he had the voice for it, the only
song Dunk knew all the way through was ?The Bear and the Maiden Fair.?
He doubted that would do much to win over Lady Webber. The kettle was
steaming once again. They wrestled it over to the tub and upended it.

Egg drew water to fill it for the third time, then clambered back onto
the well. ?You?d best not take any food or drink at Coldmoat, ser. The
Red Widow poisoned all her husbands.?

?I?m not like to marry her. She?s a highborn lady, and I?m Dunk of Flea
Bottom, remember?? He frowned. ?Just how many husbands has she had, do
you know??

?Four,? said Egg, ?but no children. Whenever she gives birth, a demon
comes by night to carry off the issue. Sam Stoops? wife says she sold
her babes unborn to the Lord of the Seven Hells, so he?d teach her his
black arts.?

?Highborn ladies don?t meddle with the black arts. They dance and sing
and do embroidery.?

?Maybe she dances with demons and embroiders evil spells,? Egg said with
relish. ?And how would you know what highborn ladies do, ser? Lady Vaith
is the only one you ever knew.?

That was insolent, but true. ?Might be I don?t know any highborn ladies,
but I know a boy who?s asking for a good clout in the ear.? Dunk rubbed
the back of his neck. A day in chainmail always left it hard as wood.
?You?ve known queens and princesses. Did they dance with demons and
practice the black arts??

?Lady Shiera does. Lord Bloodraven?s paramour. She bathes in blood to
keep her beauty. And once my sister Rhae put a love potion in my drink,
so I?d marry her instead of my sister Daella.?

Egg spoke as if such incest was the most natural thing in the world./For
him it is./ The Targaryens had been marrying brother to sister for
hundreds of years, to keep the blood of the dragon pure. Though the last
actual dragon had died before Dunk was born, the dragonkings went
on./Maybe the gods don?t mind them marrying their sisters./ ?Did the
potion work?? Dunk asked.

?It would have,? said Egg, ?but I spit it out. I don?t want a wife, I
want to be a knight of the Kingsguard, and live only to serve and defend
the king. The Kingsguard are sworn not to wed.?

?That?s a noble thing, but when you?re older you may find you?d sooner
have a girl than a white cloak.? Dunk was thinking of Tanselle Too-Tall,
and the way she?d smiled at him at Ashford. ?Ser Eustace said I was the
sort of man he?d hoped to have his daughter wed. Her name was Alysanne.?

?She?s dead, ser.?

?I know she?s dead,? said Dunk, annoyed. ?If she was alive, he said. If
she was, he?d like her to marry me. Or someone like me. I never had a
lord offer me his daughter before.?

?His/dead/ daughter. And the Osgreys might have been lords in the old
days, but Ser Eustace is only a landed knight.?

?I know what he is. Do you want a clout in the ear??

?Well,? said Egg, ?I?d sooner have a clout than a/wife/ . Especially a
dead wife, ser. The kettle?s steaming.?

They carried the water to the tub, and Dunk pulled his tunic over his
head. ?I will wear my Dornish tunic to Coldmoat.? It was sandsilk, the
finest garment that he owned, painted with his elm and falling star.

?If you wear it for the ride it will get all sweaty, ser,? Egg said.
?Wear the one you wore today. I?ll bring the other, and you can change
when you reach the castle.?

?/Before/I reach the castle. I?d look a fool, changing clothes on the
drawbridge. And who said you were coming with me??

?A knight is more impressive with a squire in attendance.?

That was true. The boy had a good sense of such things./He should. He
served two years as a page at King?s Landing./ Even so, Dunk was
reluctant to take him into danger. He had no notion what sort of welcome
awaited him at Coldmoat. If this Red Widow was as dangerous as they
said, he could end up in a crow cage, like those two men they had seen
upon the road. ?You will stay and help Bennis with the smallfolk,? he
told Egg. ?And don?t give me that sullen look.? He kicked his breeches
off, and climbed into the tub of steaming water. ?Go on and get to sleep
now, and let me have my bath. You?re not going, and that?s the end of it.?

 

Egg was up and gone when Dunk awoke, with the light of the morning sun
in his face./Gods be good, how can it be so hot so soon?/ He sat up and
stretched, yawning, then climbed to his feet and stumbled sleepily down
to the well, where he lit a fat tallow candle, splashed some cold water
on his face, and dressed.

When he stepped out into the sunlight, Thunder was waiting by the
stable, saddled and bridled. Egg was waiting, too, with Maester his mule.

The boy had put his boots on. For once he looked a proper squire, in a
handsome doublet of green and gold checks and a pair of tight white
woolen breeches. ?The breeches were torn in the seat, but Sam Stoops?
wife sewed them up for me,? he announced.

?The clothes were Addam?s,? said Ser Eustace, as he led his own gray
gelding from his stall. A chequy lion adorned the frayed silk cloak that
flowed from the old man?s shoulders. ?The doublet is a trifle musty from
the trunk, but it should serve. A knight is more impressive with a
squire in attendance, so I have decided that Egg should accompany you to
Coldmoat.?

/Outwitted by a boy of ten./Dunk looked at Egg and silently mouthed the
words/clout in the ear/ . The boy grinned.

?I have something for you as well, Ser Duncan. Come.? Ser Eustace
produced a cloak, and shook it out with a flourish.

It was white wool, bordered with squares of green satin and cloth of
gold. A woolen cloak was the last thing he needed in such heat, but when
Ser Eustace draped it about his shoulders, Dunk saw the pride on his
face, and found himself unable to refuse. ?Thank you, m?lord.?

?It suits you well. Would that I could give you more.? The old man?s
mustache twitched. ?I sent Sam Stoops down into the cellar to search
through my sons? things, but Edwyn and Harrold were smaller men, thinner
in the chest and much shorter in the leg. None of what they left would
fit you, sad to say.?

?The cloak is enough, m?lord. I won?t shame it.?

?I do not doubt that.? He gave his horse a pat. ?I thought I?d ride with
you part of the way, if you have no objection.?

?None, m?lord.?

Egg led them down the hill, sitting tall on Maester. ?Must he wear that
floppy straw hat?? Ser Eustace asked Dunk. ?He looks a bit foolish,
don?t you think??

?Not so foolish as when his head is peeling, m?lord.? Even at this hour,
with the sun barely above the horizon, it was hot./By afternoon the
saddles will be hot enough to raise blisters./ Egg might look elegant in
the dead boy?s finery, but he would be a boiled Egg by nightfall. Dunk
at least could change; he had his good tunic in his saddlebag, and his
old green one on his back.

?We?ll take the west way,? Ser Eustace announced. ?It is little used
these past years, but still the shortest way from Standfast to Coldmoat
Castle.? The path took them around back of the hill, past the graves
where the old knight had laid his wife and sons to rest in a thicket of
blackberry bushes. ?They loved to pick the berries here, my boys. When
they were little they would come to me with sticky faces and scratches
on their arms, and I?d know just where they?d been.? He smiled fondly.
?Your Egg reminds me of my Addam. A brave boy, for one so young. Addam
was trying to protect his wounded brother Harrold when the battle washed
over them. A riverman with six acorns on his shield took his arm off
with an ax.? His sad gray eyes found Dunk?s. ?This old master of yours,
the knight of Pennytree . . . did he fight in the Blackfyre Rebellion??

?He did, m?lord. Before he took me on.? Dunk had been no more than three
or four at the time, running half naked through the alleys of Flea
Bottom, more animal than boy.

?Was he for the red dragon or the black??

/Red or black?/was a dangerous question, even now. Since the days of
Aegon the Conquerer, the arms of House Targaryen had borne a
three-headed dragon, red on black. Daemon the Pretender had reversed
those colors on his own banners, as many bastards did./Ser Eustace is my
liege lord,/ Dunk reminded himself./He has a right to ask./ ?He fought
beneath Lord Hayford?s banner, m?lord.?

?Green fretty over gold, a green pale wavy??

?It might be, m?lord. Egg would know.? The lad could recite the arms of
half the knights in Westeros.

?Lord Hayford was a noted/loyalist/ . King Daeron made him his Hand just
before the battle. Butterwell had done such a dismal job that many
questioned his loyalty, but Lord Hayford had been stalwart from the first.?

?Ser Arlan was beside him when he fell. A lord with three castles on his
shield cut him down.?

?Many good men fell that day, on both sides. The grass was not red
before the battle. Did your Ser Arlan tell you that??

?Ser Arlan never liked to speak about the battle. His squire died there,
too. Roger of Pennytree was his name, Ser Arlan?s sister?s son.? Even
saying the name made Dunk feel vaguely guilty./I stole his place./ Only
princes and great lords had the means to keep two squires. If Aegon the
Unworthy had given his sword to his heir Daeron instead of his bastard
Daemon, there might never have been a Blackfyre Rebellion, and Roger of
Pennytree might be alive today./He would be a knight someplace, a truer
knight than me. I would have ended on the gallows, or been sent off to
the Night?s Watch to walk the Wall until I died./

?A great battle is a terrible thing,? the old knight said ?but in the
midst of blood and carnage, there is sometimes also beauty, beauty that
could break your heart. I will never forget the way the sun looked when
it set upon the Redgrass Field . . . ten thousand men had died, and the
air was thick with moans and lamentations, but above us the sky turned
gold and red and orange, so beautiful it made me weep to know that my
sons would never see it.? He sighed. ?It was a closer thing than they
would have you believe, these days. If not for Bloodraven . . .?

?I?d always heard that it was Baelor Breakspear who won the battle,?
said Dunk. ?Him and Prince Maekar.?

?The hammer and the anvil?? The old man?s mustache gave a twitch. ?The
singers leave out much and more. Daemon was the Warrior himself that
day. No man could stand before him. He broke Lord Arryn?s van to pieces
and slew the Knight of Ninestars and Wild Wyl Waynwood before coming up
against Ser Gwayne Corbray of the Kingsguard. For near an hour they
danced together on their horses, wheeling and circling and slashing as
men died all around them. It?s said that whenever Blackfyre and Lady
Forlorn clashed, you could hear the sound for a league around. It was
half a song and half a scream, they say. But when at last the Lady
faltered, Blackfyre clove through Ser Gwayne?s helm and left him blind
and bleeding. Daemon dismounted to see that his fallen foe was not
trampled, and commanded Redtusk to carry him back to the maesters in the
rear. And there was his mortal error, for the Raven?s Teeth had gained
the top of Weeping Ridge, and Bloodraven saw his half brother?s royal
standard three hundred yards away, and Daemon and his sons beneath it.
He slew Aegon first, the elder of the twins, for he knew that Daemon
would never leave the boy whilst warmth lingered in his body, though
white shafts fell like rain. Nor did he, though seven arrows pierced
him, driven as much by sorcery as by Bloodraven?s bow. Young Aemon took
up Blackfyre when the blade slipped from his dying father?s fingers, so
Bloodraven slew him, too, the younger of the twins. Thus perished the
black dragon and his sons.

?There was much and more afterward, I know. I saw a bit of it myself . .
. the rebels running, Bittersteel turning the rout and leading his mad
charge . . . his battle with Bloodraven, second only to the one Daemon
fought with Gwayne Corbray . . . Prince Baelor?s hammerblow against the
rebel rear, the Dornishmen all screaming as they filled the air with
spears . . . but at the end of the day, it made no matter. The war was
done when Daemon died.

?So close a thing . . . if Daemon had ridden over Gwayne Corbray and
left him to his fate, he might have broken Maekar?s left before
Bloodraven could take the ridge. The day would have belonged to the
black dragons then, with the Hand slain and the road to King?s Landing
open before them. Daemon might have been sitting on the Iron Throne by
the time Prince Baelor could come up with his stormlords and his Dornishmen.

?The singers can go on about their hammer and their anvil, ser, but it
was the kinslayer who turned the tide with a white arrow and a black
spell. He rules us now as well, make no mistake. King Aerys is his
creature. It would not surprise to learn that Bloodraven had ensorceled
His Grace, to bend him to his will. Small wonder we are cursed.? Ser
Eustace shook his head and lapsed into a brooding silence. Dunk wondered
how much Egg had overheard, but there was no way to ask him./How many
eyes does Lord Bloodraven have?/ he thought.

Already the day was growing hotter./Even the flies have fled,/ Dunk
noted./Flies have better sense than knights. They stay out of the sun./
He wondered whether he and Egg would be offered hospitality at Coldmoat.
A tankard of cool brown ale would go down well. Dunk was considering
that prospect with pleasure when he remembered what Egg had said about
the Red Widow poisoning her husbands. His thirst fled at once. There
were worse things than dry throats.

?There was a time when House Osgrey held all the lands for many leagues
around, from Nunny in the east to Cobble Cover,? Ser Eustace said.
?Coldmoat was ours, and the Horseshoe Hills, the caves at Derring Downs,
the villages of Dosk and Little Dosk and Brandybottom, both sides of
Leafy Lake . . . Osgrey maids wed Florents, Swanns, and Tarbecks, even
Hightowers and Blackwoods.?

The edge of Wat?s Wood had come in sight. Dunk shielded his eyes with
one hand and squinted at the greenery. For once he envied Egg his floppy
hat./At least we?ll have some shade./

?Wat?s Wood once extended all the way to Coldmoat,? Ser Eustace said. ?I
do not recall who Wat was. Before the Conquest you could find aurochs in
his wood, though, and great elks of twenty hands and more. There were
more red deer than any man could take in a lifetime, for none but the
king and the chequy lion were allowed to hunt here. Even in my father?s
day, there were trees on both sides of the stream, but the spiders
cleared the woods away to make pasture for their cows and sheep and horses.?

A thin finger of sweat crept down Dunk?s chest. He found himself wishing
devoutly that his liege lord would keep quiet./It is too hot for talk.
It is too hot for riding. It is just too bloody hot./

In the woods they came upon the carcass of a great brown tree cat,
crawling with maggots. ?Eew,? Egg said, as he walked Maester wide around
it, ?that stinks worse than Ser Bennis.?

Ser Eustace reined up. ?A tree cat. I had not known there were any left
in this wood. I wonder what killed him.? When no one answered, he said,
?I will turn back here. Just continue on the west way and it will take
you straight to Coldmoat. You have the coin?? Dunk nodded. ?Good. Come
home with my water, ser.? The old knight trotted off, back the way
they?d come.

When he was gone, Egg said, ?I thought how you should speak to Lady
Webber, ser. You should win her to your side with gallant compliments.?
The boy looked as cool and crisp in his chequy tunic as Ser Eustace had
in his cloak.

/Am I the only one who sweats?/?Gallant compliments,? Dunk echoed. ?What
sort of gallant compliments??

?You know, ser. Tell her how fair and beautiful she is.?

Dunk had doubts. ?She?s outlived four husbands, she must be as old as
Lady Vaith. If I say she?s fair and beautiful when she?s old and warty,
she will take me for a liar.?

?You just need to find something true to say about her. That?s what my
brother Daeron does. Even ugly old whores can have nice hair or
well-shaped ears, he says.?

?Well-shaped ears?? Dunk?s doubts were growing.

?Or pretty eyes. Tell her that her gown brings out the color of her
eyes.? The lad reflected for a moment. ?Unless she only has the one eye,
like Lord Bloodraven.?

/My lady, that gown brings out the color of your eye./Dunk had heard
knights and lordlings mouth such gallantries at other ladies. They never
put it quite so baldly, though./Good lady, that gown is beautiful. It
brings out the color of both your lovely eyes./ Some of the ladies had
been old and scrawny, or fat and florid, or pox-scarred and homely, but
all wore gowns and had two eyes, and as Dunk recalled, they?d been well
pleased by the flowery words./What a lovely gown, my lady. It brings out
the lovely beauty of your beautiful colored eyes./ ?A hedge knight?s
life is simpler,? Dunk said glumly. ?If I say the wrong thing, she?s
like to sew me in a sack of rocks and throw me in her moat.?

?I doubt she?ll have that big a sack, ser,? said Egg. ?We could use my
boot instead.?

?No,? Dunk growled, ?we couldn?t.?

When they emerged from Wat?s Wood, they found themselves well upstream
of the dam. The waters had risen high enough for Dunk to take that soak
he?d dreamed of./Deep enough to drown a man,/ he thought. On the far
side, the bank had been cut through and a ditch dug to divert some of
the flow westward. The ditch ran along the road, feeding a myriad of
smaller channels that snaked off through the fields./Once we cross the
stream, we are in the Widow?s power./ Dunk wondered what he was riding
into. He was only one man, with a boy of ten to guard his back.

Egg fanned his face. ?Ser? Why are we stopped??

?We?re not.? Dunk gave his mount his heels and splashed down into the
stream. Egg followed on the mule. The water rose as high as Thunder?s
belly before it began to fall again. They emerged dripping on the
Widow?s side. Ahead, the ditch ran straight as a spear, shining green
and golden in the sun.

When they spied the towers of Coldmoat several hours later, Dunk stopped
to change to his good Dornish tunic and loosen his longsword in its
scabbard. He did not want the blade sticking should he need to pull it
free. Egg gave his dagger?s hilt a shake as well, his face solemn
beneath his floppy hat. They rode on side by side, Dunk on the big
destrier, the boy upon his mule, the Osgrey banner flapping listlessly
from its staff.

Coldmoat came as somewhat of a disappointment, after all that Ser
Eustace had said of it. Compared to Storm?s End or Highgarden and other
lordly seats that Dunk had seen, it was a modest castle . . . but
it/was/ a castle, not a fortified watchtower. Its crenellated outer
walls stood thirty feet high, with towers at each corner, each one half
again the size of Standfast. From every turret and spire the black
banners of Webber hung heavy, each emblazoned with a spotted spider upon
a silvery web.

?Ser?? Egg said. ?The water. Look where it goes.?

The ditch ended under Coldmoat?s eastern walls, spilling down into the
moat from which the castle took its name. The gurgle of the falling
water made Dunk grind his teeth./She will not have my chequy water./
?Come,? he said to Egg.

Over the arch of the main gate a row of spider banners drooped in the
still air, above the older sigil carved deep into the stone. Centuries
of wind and weather had worn it down, but the shape of it was still
distinct: a rampant lion made of checkered squares. The gates beneath
were open. As they clattered across the drawbridge, Dunk made note of
how low the moat had fallen./Six feet at least,/ he judged.

Two spearman barred their way at the portcullis. One had a big black
beard and one did not. The beard demanded to know their purpose here.
?My lord of Osgrey sent me to treat with Lady Webber,? Dunk told him. ?I
am called Ser Duncan, the Tall.?

?Well, I knew you wasn?t Bennis,? said the beardless guard. ?We would
have smelled him coming.? He had a missing tooth and a spotted spider
badge sewn above his heart.

The beard was squinting suspiciously at Dunk. ?No one sees her ladyship
unless the Longinch gives his leave. You come with me. Your stableboy
can stay with the horses.?

?I?m a squire, not a stableboy,? Egg insisted. ?Are you blind, or only
stupid??

The beardless guard broke into laughter. The beard put the point of his
spear to the boy?s throat. ?Say that again.?

Dunk gave Egg a clout in the ear. ?No, shut your mouth and tend the
horses.? He dismounted. ?I?ll see Ser Lucas now.?

The beard lowered his spear. ?He?s in the yard.?

They passed beneath the spiked iron portcullis and under a murder hole
before emerging in the outer ward. Hounds were barking in the kennels,
and Dunk could hear singing coming from the leaded-glass windows of a
seven-sided wooden sept. In front of the smithy, a blacksmith was
shoeing a warhorse, with a ?prentice boy assisting. Nearby a squire was
loosing shafts at the archery butts, while a freckled girl with a long
braid matched him shot for shot. The quintain was spinning, too, as half
a dozen knights in quilted padding took their turns knocking it around.

They found Ser Lucas Longinch among the watchers at the quintain,
speaking with a great fat septon who was sweating worse than Dunk, a
round white pudding of a man in robes as damp as if he?d worn them in
his bath. Inchfield was a lance beside him, stiff and straight and very
tall . . . though not so tall as Dunk./Six feet and seven inches,/ Dunk
judged,/and each inch prouder than the last./ Though he wore black silk
and cloth-of-silver, Ser Lucas looked as cool as if he were walking on
the Wall.

?My lord,? the guard hailed him. ?This one comes from the chicken tower
for an audience with her ladyship.?

The septon turned first, with a hoot of delight that made Dunk wonder if
he were drunk. ?And what is this? A hedge knight? You have large hedges
in the Reach.? The septon made a sign of blessing. ?May the Warrior
fight ever at your side. I am Septon Sefton. An unfortunate name, but
mine own. And you??

?Ser Duncan the Tall.?

?A modest fellow, this one,? the septon said to Ser Lucas. ?Were I as
large as him, I?d call myself Ser Sefton the Immense. Ser Sefton the
Tower. Ser Sefton with the Clouds About His Ears.? His moon face was
flushed, and there were wine stains on his robe.

Ser Lucas studied Dunk. He was an older man; forty at the least, perhaps
as old as fifty, sinewy rather than muscular, with a remarkably ugly
face. His lips were thick, his teeth a yellow tangle, his nose broad and
fleshy, his eyes protruding./And he is angry,/ Dunk sensed, even before
the man said, ?Hedge knights are beggars with blades at best, outlaws at
worst. Begone with you. We want none of your sort here.?

Dunk?s face darkened. ?Ser Eustace Osgrey sent me from Standfast to
treat with the lady of the castle.?

?Osgrey?? The septon glanced at the Longinch. ?Osgrey of the chequy
lion? I thought House Osgrey was extinguished.?

?Near enough as makes no matter. The old man is the last of them. We let
him keep a crumbling towerhouse a few leagues east.? Ser Lucas frowned
at Dunk. ?If Ser Eustace wants to talk with her ladyship, let him come
himself.? His eyes narrowed. ?You were the one with Bennis at the dam.
Don?t trouble to deny it. I ought to hang you.?

?Seven save us.? The septon dabbed sweat from his brow with his sleeve.
?A brigand, is he? And a big one. Ser, repent your evil ways, and the
Mother will have mercy.? The septon?s pious plea was undercut when he
farted. ?Oh, dear. Forgive my wind, ser. That?s what comes of beans and
barley bread.?

?I am not a brigand,? Dunk told the two of them, with all the dignity
that he could muster.

The Longinch was unmoved by the denial. ?Do not presume upon my
patience, ser . . . if you are a/ser/ . Run back to your chicken tower
and tell Ser Eustace to deliver up Ser Bennis Brownstench. If he spares
us the trouble of winkling him out of Standfast, her ladyship may be
more inclined to clemency.?

?I will speak with her ladyship about Ser Bennis and the trouble at the
dam, and about the stealing of our water, too.?

?Stealing?? said Ser Lucas. ?Say that to our lady, and you?ll be
swimming in a sack before the sun has set. Are you quite certain that
you wish to see her??

The only thing that Dunk was certain of was that he wanted to drive his
fist through Lucas Inchfield?s crooked yellow teeth. ?I?ve told you what
I want.?

?Oh, let him speak with her,? the septon urged. ?What harm could it do?
Ser Duncan has had a long ride beneath this beastly sun, let the fellow
have his say.?

Ser Lucas studied Dunk again. ?Our septon is a godly man. Come. I will
thank you to be brief.? He strode across the yard, and Dunk was forced
to hurry after him.

The doors of the castle sept had opened, and worshipers were streaming
down the steps. There were knights and squires, a dozen children,
several old men, three septas in white robes and hoods . . . and one
soft, fleshy lady of high birth, garbed in a gown of dark blue damask
trimmed with Myrish lace, so long its hems were trailing in the dirt.
Dunk judged her to be forty. Beneath a spun-silver net her auburn hair
was piled high, but the reddest thing about her was her face.

?My lady,? Ser Lucas said, when they stood before her and her septas,
?this hedge knight claims to bring a message from Ser Eustace Osgrey.
Will you hear it??

?If you wish it, Ser Lucas.? She peered at Dunk so hard that he could
not help but recall Egg?s talk of sorcery./I don?t think this one bathes
in blood to keep her beauty./ The Widow was stout and square, with an
oddly pointed head that her hair could not quite conceal. Her nose was
too big, and her mouth too small. She did have two eyes, he was relieved
to see, but all thought of gallantry had abandoned Dunk by then. ?Ser
Eustace bid me talk with you concerning the recent trouble at your dam.?

She blinked. ?The . . . dam, you say??

A crowd was gathering about them. Dunk could feel unfriendly eyes upon
him. ?The stream,? he said, ?the Chequy Water. Your ladyship built a dam
across it . . .?

?Oh, I am quite sure I haven?t,? she replied. ?Why, I have been at my
devotions all morning, ser.?

Dunk heard Ser Lucas chuckle. ?I did not mean to say that your ladyship
built the dam herself, only that . . . without that water, all our crops
will die . . . the smallfolk have beans and barley in the fields, and
melons . . .?

?Truly? I am very fond of melons.? Her small mouth made a happy bow.
?What sort of melons are they??

Dunk glanced uneasily at the ring of faces, and felt his own face
growing hot./Something is amiss here. The Longinch is playing me for a
fool./ ?M?lady, could we continue our discussion in some . . . more
private place??

?A silver says the great oaf means to/bed her!/ ? someone japed, and a
roar of laughter went up all around him. The lady cringed away, half in
terror, and raised both hands to shield her face. One of the septas
moved quickly to her side and put a protective arm around her shoulders.

?And what is all this merriment?? The voice cut through the laughter,
cool and firm. ?Will no one share the jape? Ser knight, why are you
troubling my good-sister??

It was the girl he had seen earlier at the archery butts. She had a
quiver of arrows on one hip, and held a longbow that was just as tall as
she was, which wasn?t very tall. If Dunk was shy an inch of seven feet,
the archer was shy an inch of five. He could have spanned her waist with
his two hands. Her red hair was bound up in a braid so long it brushed
past her thighs, and she had a dimpled chin, a snub nose, and a light
spray of freckles across her cheeks.

?Forgive us, Lady Rohanne.? The speaker was a pretty young lord with the
Caswell centaur embroidered on his doublet. ?This great oaf took the
Lady Helicent for you.?

Dunk looked from one lady to the other. ?/You/are the Red Widow?? he
heard himself blurt out. ?But you?re too??

?Young?? The girl tossed her longbow to the lanky lad he?d seen her
shooting with. ?I am five-and-twenty, as it happens. Or was it/small/
you meant to say??

??pretty. It was/pretty/ .? Dunk did not know where that came from, but
he was glad it came. He liked her nose, and the strawberry-blond color
of her hair, and the small but well-shaped breasts beneath her leather
jerkin. ?I thought that you?d be . . . I mean . . . they said you were
four times a widow, so . . .?

?My first husband died when I was ten. He was twelve, my father?s
squire, ridden down upon the Redgrass Field. My husbands seldom linger
long, I fear. The last died in the spring.?

That was what they always said of those who had perished during the
Great Spring Sickness two years past./He died in the spring./ Many tens
of thousands had died in the spring, among them a wise old king and two
young princes full of promise. ?I . . . I am sorry for all your losses,
m?lady.?/A gallantry, you lunk, give her a gallantry./ ?I want to say .
. . your gown . . .?

?Gown?? She glanced down at her boots and breeches, loose linen tunic,
and leather jerkin. ?I wear no gown.?

?Your hair, I meant . . . it?s soft and . . .?

?And how would you know that, ser? If you had ever touched my hair, I
should think that I might remember.?

?Not soft,? Dunk said miserably. ?Red, I meant to say. Your hair is very
red.?

?/Very/red, ser? Oh, not as red as your face, I hope.? She laughed, and
the onlookers laughed with her.

All but Ser Lucas Longinch. ?My lady,? he broke in, ?this man is one of
Standfast?s sellswords. He was with Bennis of the Brown Shield when he
attacked your diggers at the dam and carved up Wolmer?s face. Old Osgrey
sent him to treat with you.?

?He did, m?lady. I am called Ser Duncan, the Tall.?

?Ser Duncan the Dim, more like,? said a bearded knight who wore the
threefold thunderbolt of Leygood. More guffaws sounded. Even Lady
Helicent had recovered herself enough to give a chuckle.

?Did the courtesy of Coldmoat die with my lord father?? the girl
asked./No, not a girl, a woman grown./ ?How did Ser Duncan come to make
such an error, I wonder??

Dunk gave Inchfield an evil look. ?The fault was mine.?

?Was it?? The Red Widow looked Dunk over from his heels up to his head,
though her gaze lingered longest on his chest. ?A tree and shooting
star. I have never seen those arms before.? She touched his tunic,
tracing a limb of his elm tree with two fingers. ?And painted, not sewn.
The Dornish paint their silks, I?ve heard, but you look too big to be a
Dornishman.?

?Not all Dornishmen are small, m?lady.? Dunk could feel her fingers
through the silk. Her hand was freckled, too./I?ll bet she?s freckled
all over./ His mouth was oddly dry. ?I spent a year in Dorne.?

?Do all the oaks grow so tall there?? she said, as her fingers traced a
tree limb around his heart.

?It?s meant to be an elm, m?lady.?

?I shall remember.? She drew her hand back, solemn. ?The ward is too hot
and dusty for a conversation. Septon, show Ser Duncan to my audience
chamber.?

?It would be my great pleasure, good-sister.?

?Our guest will have a thirst. You may send for a flagon of wine as well.?

?Must I?? The fat man beamed. ?Well, if it please you.?

?I will join you as soon as I have changed.? Unhooking her belt and
quiver, she handed them to her companion. ?I?ll want Maester Cerrick as
well. Ser Lucas, go ask him to attend me.?

?I will bring him at once, my lady,? said Lucas the Longinch.

The look she gave her castellan was cool. ?No need. I know you have many
duties to perform about the castle. It will suffice if you send Maester
Cerrick to my chambers.?

?M?lady,? Dunk called after her. ?My squire was made to wait by the
gates. Might he join us as well??

?Your squire?? When she smiled, she looked a girl of five-and-ten, not a
woman five-and-twenty./A pretty girl full of mischief and laughter./ ?If
it please you, certainly.?

 

?Don?t drink the wine, ser,? Egg whispered to him as they waited with
the septon in her audience chamber. The stone floors were covered with
sweet-smelling rushes, the walls hung with tapestries of tourney scenes
and battles.

Dunk snorted. ?She has no need to poison me,? he whispered back. ?She
thinks I?m some great lout with pease porridge between his ears, you mean.?

?As it happens, my good-sister likes pease porridge,? said Septon
Sefton, as he reappeared with a flagon of wine, a flagon of water, and
three cups. ?Yes, yes, I heard. I?m fat, not deaf.? He filled two cups
with wine and one with water. The third he gave to Egg, who gave it a
long dubious look and put it aside. The septon took no notice. ?This is
an Arbor vintage,? he was telling Dunk. ?Very fine, and the poison gives
it a special piquance.? He winked at Egg. ?I seldom touch the grape
myself, but I have heard.? He handed Dunk a cup.

The wine was lush and sweet, but Dunk sipped it gingerly, and only after
the septon had quaffed down half of his in three big, lip-smacking
gulps. Egg crossed his arms and continued to ignore his water.

?She does like pease porridge,? the septon said, ?and you as well, ser.
I know my own good-sister. When I first saw you in the yard, I half
hoped you were some suitor, come from King?s Landing to seek my lady?s
hand.?

Dunk furrowed his brow. ?How did you know I was from King?s Landing,
septon??

?Kingslanders have a certain way of speaking.? The septon took a gulp of
wine, sloshed it about his mouth, swallowed, and sighed with pleasure.
?I have served there many years, attending our High Septon in the Great
Sept of Baelor.? He sighed. ?You would not know the city since the
spring. The fires changed it. A quarter of the houses gone, and another
quarter empty. The rats are gone as well. That is the queerest thing. I
never thought to see a city without rats.?

Dunk had heard that, too. ?Were you there during the Great Spring Sickness??

?Oh, indeed. A dreadful time, ser, dreadful. Strong men would wake
healthy at the break of day and be dead by evenfall. So many died so
quickly there was no time to bury them. They piled them in the Dragonpit
instead, and when the corpses were ten feet deep, Lord Rivers commanded
the pyromancers to burn them. The light of the fires shone through the
windows, as it did of yore when living dragons still nested beneath the
dome. By night you could see the glow all through the city, the dark
green glow of wildfire. The color green still haunts me to this day.
They say the spring was bad in Lannisport and worse in Oldtown, but in
King?s Landing it cut down four of ten. Neither young nor old were
spared, nor rich nor poor, nor great nor humble. Our good High Septon
was taken, the gods? own voice on earth, with a third of the Most Devout
and near all our silent sisters. His Grace King Daeron, sweet Matarys
and bold Valarr, the Hand . . . oh, it was a dreadful time. By the end,
half the city was praying to the Stranger.? He had another drink. ?And
where were you, ser??

?In Dorne,? said Dunk.

?Thank the Mother for her mercy, then.? The Great Spring Sickness had
never come to Dorne, perhaps because the Dornish had closed their
borders and their ports, as had the Arryns of the Vale, who had also
been spared. ?All this talk of death is enough to put a man off wine,
but cheer is hard to come by in such times as we are living. The drought
endures, for all our prayers. The kingswood is one great tinderbox, and
fires rage there night and day. Bittersteel and the sons of Daemon
Blackfyre are hatching plots in Tyrosh, and Dagon Greyjoy?s krakens
prowl the sunset sea like wolves, raiding as far south as the Arbor.
They carried off half the wealth of Fair Isle, it?s said, and a hundred
women, too. Lord Farman is repairing his defenses, though that strikes
me as akin to the man who claps his pregnant daughter in a chastity belt
when her belly?s big as mine. Lord Bracken is dying slowly on the
Trident, and his eldest son perished in the spring. That means Ser Otho
must succeed. The Blackwoods will never stomach the Brute of Bracken as
a neighbor. It will mean war.?

Dunk knew about the ancient enmity between the Blackwoods and the
Brackens. ?Won?t their liege lord force a peace??

?Alas,? said Septon Sefton, ?Lord Tully is a boy of eight, surrounded by
women. Riverrun will do little, and King Aerys will do less. Unless some
maester writes a book about it, the whole matter may escape his royal
notice. Lord Rivers is not like to let any Brackens in to see him. Pray
recall, our Hand was born half Blackwood. If he acts at all, it will be
only to help his cousins bring the Brute to bay. The Mother marked Lord
Rivers on the day that he was born, and Bittersteel marked him once
again upon the Redgrass Field.?

Dunk knew he meant Bloodraven. Brynden Rivers was the Hand?s true name.
His mother had been a Blackwood, his father King Aegon the Fourth.

The fat man drank his wine and rattled on. ?As for Aerys, His Grace
cares more for old scrolls and dusty prophecies than for lords and laws.
He will not even bestir himself to sire an heir. Queen Aelinor prays
daily at the Great Sept, beseeching the Mother Above to bless her with a
child, yet she remains a maid. Aerys keeps his own apartments, and it is
said that he would sooner take a book to bed than any woman.? He filled
his cup again. ?Make no mistake, ?tis Lord Rivers who rules us, with his
spells and spies. There is no one to oppose him. Prince Maekar sulks at
Summerhall, nursing his grievances against his royal brother. Prince
Rhaegal is as meek as he is mad, and his children are . . . well,
children. Friends and favorites of Lord Rivers fill every office, the
lords of the small council lick his hand, and this new Grand Maester is
as steeped in sorcery as he is. The Red Keep is garrisoned by Raven?s
Teeth, and no man sees the king without his leave.?

Dunk shifted uncomfortably in his seat./How many eyes does Lord
Bloodraven have? A thousand eyes, and one./ He hoped the King?s Hand did
not have a thousand ears and one as well. Some of what Septon Sefton was
saying sounded treasonous. He glanced at Egg, to see how he was taking
all of this. The boy was struggling with all his might to hold his tongue.

The septon pushed himself to his feet. ?My good-sister will be a while
yet. As with all great ladies, the first ten gowns she tries will be
found not to suit her mood. Will you take more wine?? Without waiting
for an answer, he refilled both cups.

?The lady I mistook,? said Dunk, anxious to speak of something else, ?is
she your sister??

?We are all children of the Seven, ser, but apart from that . . . dear
me, no. Lady Helicent was sister to Ser Rolland Uffering, Lady Rohanne?s
fourth husband, who died in the spring. My brother was his predecessor,
Ser Simon Staunton, who had the great misfortune to choke upon a chicken
bone. Coldmoat crawls with revenants, it must be said. The husbands die
yet their kin remain, to drink my lady?s wines and eat her sweetmeats,
like a plague of plump pink locusts done up in silk and velvet.? He
wiped his mouth. ?And yet she must wed again, and soon.?

?Must?? said Dunk.

?Her lord father?s will demands it. Lord Wyman wanted grandsons to carry
on his line. When he sickened he tried to wed her to the Longinch, so he
might die knowing that she had a strong man to protect her, but Rohanne
refused to have him. His lordship took his vengeance in his will. If she
remains unwed on the second anniversary of her father?s passing,
Coldmoat and its lands pass to his cousin Wendell. Perhaps you glimpsed
him in the yard. A short man with a goiter on his neck, much given to
flatulence. Though it is small of me to say so. I am cursed with excess
wind myself. Be that as it may. Ser Wendell is grasping and stupid, but
his lady wife is Lord Rowan?s sister . . . and damnably fertile, that
cannot be denied. She whelps as often as he farts. Their sons are quite
as bad as he is, their daughters worse, and all of them have begun to
count the days. Lord Rowan has upheld the will, so her ladyship has only
till the next new moon.?

?Why has she waited so long?? Dunk wondered aloud.

The septon shrugged. ?If truth be told, there has been a dearth of
suitors. My good-sister is not hard to look upon, you will have noticed,
and a stout castle and broad lands add to her charms. You would think
that younger sons and landless knights would swarm about her ladyship
like flies. You would be wrong. The four dead husbands make them wary,
and there are those who will say that she is barren, too . . . though
never in her hearing, unless they yearn to see the inside of a crow
cage. She has carried two children to term, a boy and a girl, but
neither lived to see a name day. Those few who are not put off by talk
of poisonings and sorcery want no part of the Longinch. Lord Wyman
charged him on his deathbed to protect his daughter from unworthy
suitors, which he has taken to mean/all/ suitors. Any man who means to
have her hand would need to face his sword first.? He finished his wine
and set the cup aside. ?That is not to say there has been no one.
Cleyton Caswell and Simon Leygood have been the most persistent, though
they seem more interested in her lands than in her person. Were I given
to wagering, I should place my gold on Gerold Lannister. He has yet to
put in an appearance, but they say he is golden-haired and quick of wit,
and more than six feet tall . . .?

?. . . and Lady Webber is much taken with his letters.? The lady in
question stood in the doorway, beside a homely young maester with a
great hooked nose. ?You would lose your wager, good-brother. Gerold will
never willingly forsake the pleasures of Lannisport and the splendor of
Casterly Rock for some little lordship. He has more influence as Lord
Tybolt?s brother and adviser than he could ever hope for as my husband.
As for the others, Ser Simon would need to sell off half my land to pay
his debts and Ser Cleyton trembles like a leaf whenever the Longinch
deigns to look his way. Besides, he is prettier than I am. And you,
septon, have the biggest mouth in Westeros.?

?A large belly requires a large mouth,? said Septon Sefton, utterly
unabashed. ?Else it soon becomes a small one.?

?Are/you/ the Red Widow?? Egg asked, astonished. ?I?m near as tall as
you are!?

?Another boy made that same observation not half a year ago. I sent him
to the rack to make him taller.? When Lady Rohanne settled onto the high
seat on the dais, she pulled her braid forward over her left shoulder.
It was so long that the end of it lay coiled in her lap, like a sleeping
cat. ?Ser Duncan, I should not have teased you in the yard, when you
were trying so hard to be gracious. It was only that you blushed so red
. . . was there no girl to tease you, in the village where you grew so
tall??

?The village was King?s Landing.? He did not mention Flea Bottom. ?There
were girls, but . . .? The sort of teasing that went on in Flea Bottom
sometimes involved cutting off a toe.

?I expect they were afraid to tease you.? Lady Rohanne stroked her
braid. ?No doubt they were frightened of your size. Do not think ill of
Lady Helicent, I pray you. My good-sister is a simple creature, but she
has no harm in her. For all her piety, she could not dress herself
without her septas.?

?It was not her doing. The mistake was mine.?

?You lie most gallantly. I know it was Ser Lucas. He is a man of cruel
humors, and you offended him on sight.?

?How?? Dunk said, puzzled. ?I never did him any harm.?

She smiled a smile that made him wish she were plainer. ?I saw you
standing with him. You?re taller by a hand, or near enough. It has been
a long while since Ser Lucas met anyone he could not look down on. How
old are you, ser??

?Near twenty, if it please m?lady.? Dunk liked the ring of/twenty/ ,
though most like he was a year younger, maybe two. No one knew for
certain, least of all him. He must have had a mother and a father like
everybody else, but he?d never known them, not even their names, and no
one in Flea Bottom had ever cared much when he?d been born, or to whom.

?Are you as strong as you appear??

?How strong do I appear, m?lady??

?Oh, strong enough to annoy Ser Lucas. He is my castellan, though not by
choice. Like Coldmoat, he is a legacy of my father. Did you come to
knighthood on some battlefield, Ser Duncan? Your speech suggests that
you were not born of noble blood, if you will forgive my saying so.?

/I was born of gutter blood./?A hedge knight named Ser Arlan of
Pennytree took me on to squire for him when I was just a boy. He taught
me chivalry and the arts of war.?

?And this same Ser Arlan knighted you??

Dunk shuffled his feet. One of his boots was half unlaced, he saw. ?No
one else was like to do it.?

?Where is Ser Arlan now??

?He died.? He raised his eyes. He could lace his boot up later. ?I
buried him on a hillside.?

?Did he fall valiantly in battle??

?There were rains. He caught a chill.?

?Old men are frail, I know. I learned that from my second husband. I was
thirteen when we wed. He would have been five-and-fifty on his next name
day, had he lived long enough to see it. When he was half a year in the
ground, I gave him a little son, but the Stranger came for him as well.
The septons said his father wanted him beside him. What do you think, ser??

?Well,? Dunk said hesitantly, ?that might be, m?lady.?

?Nonsense,? she said, ?the boy was born too weak. Such a tiny thing. He
scarce had strength enough to nurse. Still. The gods gave his father
five-and-fifty years. You would think they might have granted more than
three days to the son.?

?You would.? Dunk knew little and less about the gods. He went to sept
sometimes, and prayed to the Warrior to lend strength to his arms, but
elsewise he let the Seven be.

?I am sorry your Ser Arlan died,? she said, ?and sorrier still that you
took service with Ser Eustace. All old men are not the same, Ser Duncan.
You would do well to go home to Pennytree.?

?I have no home but where I swear my sword.? Dunk had never seen
Pennytree; he couldn?t even say if it was in the Reach.

?Swear it here, then. The times are uncertain. I have need of knights.
You look as though you have a healthy appetite, Ser Duncan. How many
chickens can you eat? At Coldmoat you would have your fill of warm pink
meat and sweet fruit tarts. Your squire looks in need of sustenance as
well. He is so scrawny that all his hair has fallen out. We?ll have him
share a cell with other boys of his own age. He?ll like that. My
master-at-arms can train him in all the arts of war.?

?I train him,? said Dunk defensively.

?And who else? Bennis? Old Osgrey? The chickens??

There had been days when Dunk had set Egg to chasing chickens./It helps
make him quicker,/ he thought, but he knew that if he said it she would
laugh. She was distracting him, with her snub nose and her freckles.
Dunk had to remind himself of why Ser Eustace had sent him here. ?My
sword is sworn to my lord of Osgrey, m?lady,? he said, ?and that?s the
way it is.?

?So be it, ser. Let us speak of less pleasant matters.? Lady Rohanne
gave her braid a tug. ?We do not suffer attacks on Coldmoat or its
people. So tell me why I should not have you sewn in a sack.?

?I came to parlay,? he reminded her, ?and I have drunk your wine.? The
taste still lingered in his mouth, rich and sweet. So far it had not
poisoned him. Perhaps it was the wine that made him bold. ?And you don?t
have a sack big enough for me.?

To his relief, Egg?s jape made her smile. ?I have several that are big
enough for Bennis, though. Maester Cerrick says Wolmer?s face was sliced
open almost to the bone.?

?Ser Bennis lost his temper with the man, m?lady. Ser Eustace sent me
here to pay the blood price.?

?The blood price?? She laughed. ?He is an old man, I know, but I had not
realized that he was so old as that. Does he think we are living in the
Age of Heroes, when a man?s life was reckoned to be worth no more than a
sack of silver??

?The digger was not killed, m?lady,? Dunk reminded her. ?No one was
killed that I saw. His face was cut, is all.?

Her fingers danced idly along her braid. ?How much does Ser Eustace
reckon Wolmer?s cheek to be worth, pray??

?One silver stag. And three for you, m?lady.?

?Ser Eustace sets a niggard?s price upon my honor, though three silvers
are better than three chickens, I grant you. He would do better to
deliver Bennis up to me for chastisement.?

?Would this involve that sack you mentioned??

?It might.? She coiled her braid around one hand. ?Osgrey can keep his
silver. Only blood can pay for blood.?

?Well,? said Dunk, ?it may be as you say, m?lady, but why not send for
that man that Bennis cut, and ask him if he?d sooner have a silver stag
or Bennis in a sack??

?Oh, he?d pick the silver, if he couldn?t have both. I don?t doubt that,
ser. It is not his choice to make. This is about the lion and the spider
now, not some peasant?s cheek. It is Bennis I want, and Bennis I shall
have. No one rides onto my lands, does harm to one of mine, and escapes
to laugh about it.?

?Your ladyship rode onto Standfast land, and did harm of one of Ser
Eustace?s,? Dunk said, before he stopped to think about it.

?Did I?? She tugged her braid again. ?If you mean the sheep-stealer, the
man was notorious. I had twice complained to Osgrey, yet he did nothing.
I do not ask thrice. The king?s law grants me the power of pit and gallows.?

It was Egg who answered her. ?On your own lands,? the boy insisted. ?The
king?s law gives lords the power of pit and gallows on their own lands.?

?Clever boy,? she said. ?If you know that much, you will also know that
landed knights have no right to punish without their liege lord?s leave.
Ser Eustace holds Standfast of Lord Rowan. Bennis broke the king?s peace
when he drew blood, and must answer for it.? She looked to Dunk. ?If Ser
Eustace will deliver Bennis to me, I?ll slit his nose, and that will be
the end of it. If I must come and take him, I make no such promise.?

Dunk had a sudden sick feeling in the pit of his stomach. ?I will tell
him, but he won?t give up Ser Bennis.? He hesitated. ?The dam was the
cause of all the trouble. If your ladyship would consent to take it down??

?Impossible,? declared the young maester by Lady Rohanne?s side.
?Coldmoat supports twenty times as many smallfolk as does Standfast. Her
ladyship has fields of wheat and corn and barley, all dying from the
drought. She has half a dozen orchards, apples and apricots and three
kinds of pears. She has cows about to calf, five hundred head of
black-nosed sheep, and she breeds the finest horses in the Reach. We
have a dozen mares about to foal.?

?Ser Eustace has sheep, too,? Dunk said. ?He has melons in the fields,
beans and barleycorn, and . . .?

?You were taking water for the/moat/ !? Egg said loudly.

/I was getting to the moat,/Dunk thought.

?The moat is essential to Coldmoat?s defenses,? the maester insisted.
?Do you suggest that Lady Rohanne leave herself open to attack, in such
uncertain times as these??

?Well,? Dunk said slowly, ?a dry moat is still a moat. And m?lady has
strong walls, with ample men to defend them.?

?Ser Duncan,? Lady Rohanne said, ?I was ten years old when the black
dragon rose. I begged my father not to put himself at risk, or at least
to leave my husband. Who would protect me, if both my men were gone? So
he took me up onto the ramparts, and pointed out Coldmoat?s strong
points. ?Keep them strong,? he said, ?and they will keep you safe. If
you see to your defenses, no man may do you harm.? The first thing he
pointed at was the moat.? She stroked her cheek with the tail of her
braid. ?My first husband perished on the Redgrass Field. My father found
me others, but the Stranger took them, too. I no longer trust in men, no
matter how/ample/ they may seem. I trust in stone and steel and water. I
trust in moats, ser, and mine will/not/ go dry.?

?What your father said, that?s well and good,? said Dunk, ?but it
doesn?t give you the right to take Osgrey water.?

She tugged her braid. ?I suppose Ser Eustace told you that the stream
was his.?

?For a thousand years,? said Dunk. ?It?s/named/ the Chequy Water. That?s
plain.?

?So it is.? She tugged again; once, twice, thrice. ?As the river is
called the Mander, though the Manderlys were driven from its banks a
thousand years ago. Highgarden is still Highgarden, though the last
Gardener died on the Field of Fire. Casterly Rock teems with Lannisters,
and nowhere a Casterly to be found. The world changes, ser. This Chequy
Water rises in the Horseshoe Hills, which were wholly mine when last I
looked. The water is mine as well. Maester Cerrick, show him.?

The maester descended from the dais. He could not have been much older
than Dunk, but in his gray robes and chain collar he had an air of
somber wisdom that belied his years. In his hands was an old parchment.
?See for yourself, ser,? he said as he unrolled it, and offered it to Dunk.

/Dunk the lunk, thick as a castle wall./He felt his cheeks reddening
again. Gingerly he took the parchment from the maester and scowled at
the writing. Not a word of it was intelligible to him, but he knew the
wax seal beneath the ornate signature; the three-headed dragon of House
Targaryen./The king?s seal./ He was looking at a royal decree of some
sort. Dunk moved his head from side to side so they would think that he
was reading. ?There?s a word here I can?t make out,? he muttered, after
a moment. ?Egg, come have a look, you have sharper eyes than me.?

The boy darted to his side. ?Which word, ser?? Dunk pointed. ?That one?
Oh.? Egg read quickly, then raised his eyes to Dunk?s and gave a little nod.

/It is her stream. She has a paper./Dunk felt as though he?d been
punched in the stomach./The king?s own seal./ ?This . . . there must be
some mistake. The old man?s sons died in service to the king, why would
His Grace take his stream away??

?If King Daeron had been a less forgiving man, he should have lost his
head as well.?

For half a heartbeat Dunk was lost. ?What do you mean??

?She means,? said Maester Cerrick, ?that Ser Eustace Osgrey is a rebel
and a traitor.?

?Ser Eustace chose the black dragon over the red, in the hope that a
Blackfyre king might restore the lands and castles that the Osgreys had
lost under the Targaryens,? Lady Rohanne said. ?Chiefly he wanted
Coldmoat. His sons paid for his treason with their life?s blood. When he
brought their bones home and delivered his daughter to the king?s men
for a hostage, his wife threw herself from the top of Standfast tower.
Did Ser Eustace tell you that?? Her smile was sad. ?No, I did not think so.?

?The black dragon.?/You swore your sword to a traitor, lunk. You ate a
traitor?s bread and slept beneath a rebel?s roof./ ?M?lady,? he said,
groping, ?the black dragon . . . that was fifteen years ago. This is
now, and there?s a drought. Even if he was a rebel once, Ser Eustace
still needs water.?

The Red Widow rose and smoothed her skirts. ?He had best pray for rain,
then.?

That was when Dunk recalled Osgrey?s parting words in the wood. ?If you
will not grant him a share of the water for his own sake, do it for his
son.?

?His son??

?Addam. He served here as your father?s page and squire.?

Lady Rohanne?s face was stone. ?Come closer.?

He did not know what else to do, but to obey. The dais added a good foot
to her height, yet even so Dunk towered over her. ?Kneel,? she said. He did.

The slap she gave him had all her strength behind it, and she was
stronger than she looked. His cheek burned, and he could taste blood in
his mouth from a broken lip, but she hadn?t truly hurt him. For a moment
all Dunk could think of was grabbing her by that long red braid and
pulling her across his lap to slap her arse, as you would a spoiled
child./If I do, she?ll scream, though, and twenty knights will come
bursting in to kill me./

?You dare appeal to me in/Addam?s/ name?? Her nostrils flared. ?Remove
yourself from Coldmoat, ser. At once.?

?I never meant??

?/Go,/or I will find a sack large enough for you, if I have to sew one
up myself. Tell Ser Eustace to bring me Bennis of the Brown Shield by
the morrow, else I will come for him myself with fire and sword. Do you
understand me?/Fire and sword!/ ?

Septon Sefton took Dunk?s arm and pulled him quickly from the room. Egg
followed close behind them. ?That was most unwise, ser,? the fat septon
whispered, and he led them to the steps. ?/Most/unwise. To mention Addam
Osgrey . . .?

?Ser Eustace told me she was fond of the boy.?

?Fond?? The septon huffed heavily. ?She loved the boy, and him her. It
never went beyond a kiss or two, but . . . it was Addam she wept for
after the Redgrass Field, not the husband she hardly knew. She blames
Ser Eustace for his death, and rightly so. The boy was twelve.?

Dunk knew what it was to bear a wound. Whenever someone spoke of Ashford
Meadow, he thought of the three good men who?d died to save his foot,
and it never failed to hurt. ?Tell m?lady that it was not my wish to
hurt her. Beg her pardon.?

?I shall do all I can, ser,? Septon Sefton said, ?but tell Ser Eustace
to bring her Bennis, and/quickly/ . Elsewise it will go hard on him. It
will go very hard.?

 

Not until the walls and towers of Coldmoat had vanished in the west
behind them did Dunk turn to Egg and say, ?What words were written on
that paper??

?It was a grant of rights, ser. To Lord Wyman Webber, from the king. For
his leal service in the late rebellion, Lord Wyman and his descendants
were granted all rights to the Chequy Water, from where it rises in the
Horseshoe Hills to the shores of Leafy Lake. It also said that Lord
Wyman and his descendants should have the right to take red deer and
boar and rabbits in Wat?s Wood whene?er it pleased them, and to cut
twenty trees from the wood each year.? The boy cleared his throat. ?The
grant was only for a time, though. The paper said that if Ser Eustace
were to die without a male heir of his body, Standfast would revert to
the crown, and Lord Webber?s privileges would end.?

/They were the Marshalls of the Northmarch for a thousand years./?All
they left the old man was a tower to die in.?

?And his head,? said Egg. ?His Grace did leave him his head, ser. Even
though he was a rebel.?

Dunk gave the boy a look. ?Would you have taken it??

Egg had to think about it. ?Sometimes at court I would serve the king?s
small council. They used to fight about it. Uncle Baelor said that
clemency was best when dealing with an honorable foe. If a defeated man
believes he will be pardoned, he may lay down his sword and bend the
knee. Elsewise he will fight on to the death, and slay more loyal men
and innocents. But Lord Bloodraven said that when you pardon rebels, you
only plant the seeds of the next rebellion.? His voice was full of
doubts. ?Why would Ser Eustace rise against King Daeron? He was a good
king, everybody says so. He brought Dorne into the realm and made the
Dornishmen our friends.?

?You would have to ask Ser Eustace, Egg.? Dunk thought he knew the
answer, but it was not one the boy would want to hear./He wanted a
castle with a lion on the gatehouse, but all he got were graves among
the blackberries./ When you swore a man your sword, you promised to
serve and obey, to fight for him at need, not to pry into his affairs
and question his allegiances . . . but Ser Eustace had played him for a
fool./He said his sons died fighting for the king, and let me believe
the stream was his./

Night caught them in Wat?s Wood.

That was Dunk?s fault. He should have gone the straight way home, the
way they?d gone, but instead he?d taken them north for another look at
the dam. He had half a thought to try and tear the thing apart with his
bare hands. But the Seven and Ser Lucas Longinch did not prove so
obliging. When they reached the dam they found it guarded by a pair of
crossbowmen with spider badges sewn on their jerkins. One sat with his
bare feet in the stolen water. Dunk could gladly have throttled him for
that alone, but the man heard them coming and was quick to snatch up his
bow. His fellow, even quicker, had a quarrel nocked and ready. The best
that Dunk could do was scowl at them threateningly.

After that, there was naught to do but retrace their steps. Dunk did not
know these lands as well as Ser Bennis did; it would have been
humiliating to get lost in a wood as small as Wat?s. By the time they
splashed across the stream, the sun was low on the horizon and the first
stars were coming out, along with clouds of mites. Amongst the tall
black trees, Egg found his tongue again. ?Ser? That fat septon said my
father sulks in Summerhall.?

?Words are wind.?

?My father doesn?t sulk.?

?Well,? said Dunk, ?he might./You/ sulk.?

?I do not. Ser.? He frowned. ?Do I??

?Some. Not too often, though. Elsewise I?d clout you in the ear more
than I do.?

?You clouted me in the ear at the gate.?

?That was half a clout at best. If I ever give you a whole clout, you?ll
know it.?

?The Red Widow gave/you/ a whole clout.?

Dunk touched his swollen lip. ?You don?t need to sound so pleased about
it.?/No one ever clouted your father in the ear, though. Maybe that?s
why Prince Maekar is the way he is./ ?When the king named Lord
Bloodraven his Hand, your lord father refused to be part of his council
and departed King?s Landing for his own seat,? he reminded Egg. ?He has
been at Summerhall for a year, and half of another. What do you call
that, if not sulking??

?I call it being wroth,? Egg declared loftily. ?His Grace should have
made my father Hand. He?s his/brother/ , and the finest battle commander
in the realm since Uncle Baelor died. Lord Bloodraven?s not even a real
lord, that?s just some stupid/courtesy/ . He?s a sorcerer, and baseborn
besides.?

?Bastard born, not baseborn.? Bloodraven might not be a real lord, but
he was noble on both sides. His mother had been one of the many
mistresses of King Aegon the Unworthy. Aegon?s bastards had been the
bane of the Seven Kingdoms ever since the old king died. He had
legitimized the lot upon his deathbed; not only the Great Bastards like
Bloodraven, Bittersteel, and Daemon Blackfyre, whose mothers had been
ladies, but even the lesser ones he?d fathered on whores and tavern
wenches, merchant?s daughters, mummer?s maidens, and every pretty
peasant girl who chanced to catch his eye./Fire and Blood/ were the
words of House Targaryen, but Dunk once heard Ser Arlan say that Aegon?s
should have been/Wash Her and Bring Her to My Bed./

?King Aegon washed Bloodraven clean of bastardy,? he reminded Egg, ?the
same as he did the rest of them.?

?The old High Septon told my father that king?s laws are one thing, and
the laws of the gods another,? the boy said stubbornly. ?Trueborn
children are made in a marriage bed and blessed by the Father and the
Mother, but bastards are born of lust and weakness, he said. King Aegon
decreed that his bastards were not bastards, but he could not change
their nature. The High Septon said all bastards are born to betrayal . .
. Daemon Blackfyre, Bittersteel, even Bloodraven. Lord Rivers was more
cunning than the other two, he said, but in the end he would prove
himself a traitor, too. The High Septon counseled my father never to put
any trust in him, nor in any other bastards, great or small.?

/Born to betrayal,/Dunk thought./Born of lust and weakness. Never to be
trusted, great or small./ ?Egg,? he said, ?didn?t you ever think that I
might be a bastard??

?You, ser?? That took the boy aback. ?You are not.?

?I might be. I never knew my mother, or what became of her. Maybe I was
born too big and killed her. Most like she was some whore or tavern
girl. You don?t find highborn ladies down in Flea Bottom. And if she
ever wed my father . . . well, what became of/him/ , then?? Dunk did not
like to be reminded of his life before Ser Arlan found him. ?There was a
pot shop in King?s Landing where I used to sell them rats and cats and
pigeons for the brown. The cook always claimed my father was some thief
or cutpurse. ?Most like I saw him hanged,? he used to tell me, ?but
maybe they just sent him to the Wall.? When I was squiring for Ser
Arlan, I would ask him if we couldn?t go up that way someday, to take
service at Winterfell or some other northern castle. I had this notion
that if I could only reach the Wall, might be I?d come on some old man,
a real tall man who looked like me. We never went, though. Ser Arlan
said there were no hedges in the north, and all the woods were full of
wolves.? He shook his head. ?The long and short of it is, most like
you?re squiring for a bastard.?

For once Egg had nothing to say. The gloom was deepening around them.
Lantern bugs moved slowly through the trees, their little lights like so
many drifting stars. There were stars in the sky as well, more stars
than any man could ever hope to count, even if he lived to be as old as
King Jaehaerys. Dunk need only lift his eyes to find familiar friends:
the Stallion and the Sow, the King?s Crown and the Crone?s Lantern, the
Galley, Ghost, and Moonmaid. But there were clouds to the north, and the
blue eye of the Ice Dragon was lost to him, the blue eye that pointed north.

The moon had risen by the time they came to Standfast, standing dark and
tall atop its hill. A pale yellow light was spilling from the tower?s
upper windows, he saw. Most nights Ser Eustace sought his bed as soon as
he had supped, but not tonight, it seemed./He is waiting for us,/ Dunk knew.

Bennis of the Brown Shield was waiting up as well. They found him
sitting on the tower steps, chewing sourleaf and honing his longsword in
the moonlight. The slow scrape of stone on steel carried a long way.
However much Ser Bennis might neglect his clothes and person, he kept
his weapons well.

?The lunk comes back,? Bennis said. ?Here I was sharpening my steel to
go rescue you from that Red Widow.?

?Where are the men??

?Treb and Wet Wat are on the roof standing watch, in case the widow
comes to call. The rest crawled into bed whimpering. Sore as sin, they
are. I worked them hard. Drew a little blood off that big lackwit, just
to make him mad. He fights better when he?s mad.? He smiled his
brown-and-red smile. ?Nice bloody lip you got. Next time, don?t go
turning over rocks. What did the woman say??

?She means to keep the water, and she wants you as well, for cutting
that digger by the dam.?

?Thought she might.? Bennis spat. ?Lot o? bother for some peasant. He
ought to thank me. Women like a man with scars.?

?You won?t mind her slitting your nose, then.?

?Bugger that. If I wanted my nose slit I?d slit it for myself.? He
jerked a thumb up. ?You?ll find Ser Useless in his chambers, brooding on
how great he used to be.?

Egg spoke up. ?He fought for the black dragon.?

Dunk could have given the boy a clout, but the brown knight only
laughed. ? ?Course he did. Just look at him. He strike you as the kind
who picks the winning side??

?No more than you. Else you wouldn?t be here with us.? Dunk turned to
Egg. ?Tend to Thunder and Maester and then come up and join us.?

When Dunk came up through the trap, the old knight was sitting by the
hearth in his bedrobe, though no fire had been laid. His father?s cup
was in his hand, a heavy silver cup that had been made for some Lord
Osgrey back before the Conquest. A chequy lion adorned the bowl, done in
flakes of jade and gold, though some of the jade flakes had gone
missing. At the sound of Dunk?s footsteps, the old knight looked up and
blinked like a man waking from a dream. ?Ser Duncan. You are back. Did
the sight of you give Lucas Inchfield pause, ser??

?Not as I saw, m?lord. More like, it made him wroth.? Dunk told it all
as best he could, though he omitted the part about Lady Helicent, which
made him look an utter fool. He would have left out the clout, too, but
his broken lip had puffed up twice its normal size, and Ser Eustace
could not help but notice.

When he did, he frowned. ?Your lip . . .?

Dunk touched it gingerly. ?Her ladyship gave me a slap.?

?She/struck/ you?? His mouth opened and closed. ?She struck my envoy,
who came to her beneath the chequy lion? She dared lay hands upon your
person??

?Only the one hand, ser. It stopped bleeding before we even left the
castle.? He made a fist. ?She wants Ser Bennis, not your silver, and she
won?t take down the dam. She showed me a parchment with some writing on
it, and the king?s own seal. It said the stream is hers. And . . .? He
hesitated. ?She said that you were . . . that you had . . .?

?. . . risen with the black dragon?? Ser Eustace seemed to slump. ?I
feared she might. If you wish to leave my service, I will not stop you.?
The old knight gazed into his cup, though what he might be looking for
Dunk could not say.

?You told me your sons died fighting for the king.?

?And so they did. The/rightful/ king, Daemon Blackfyre. The King Who
Bore the Sword.? The old man?s mustache quivered. ?The men of the red
dragon call themselves the/loyalists/ , but we who chose the black were
just as loyal, once. Though now . . . all the men who marched beside me
to seat Prince Daemon on the Iron Throne have melted away like morning
dew. Mayhaps I dreamed them. Or more like, Lord Bloodraven and his
Raven?s Teeth have put the fear in them. They cannot all be dead.?

Dunk could not deny the truth of that. Until this moment, he had never
met a man who?d fought for the Pretender./I must have, though. There
were thousands of them. Half the realm was for the red dragon, and half
was for the black./ ?Both sides fought valiantly, Ser Arlan always
said.? He thought the old knight would want to hear that.

Ser Eustace cradled his wine cup in both hands. ?If Daemon had ridden
over Gwayne Corbray . . . if Fireball had not been slain on the eve of
battle . . . if Hightower and Tarbeck and Oakheart and Butterwell had
lent us their full strength instead of trying to keep one foot in each
camp . . . if Manfred Lothston had proved true instead of treacherous .
. . if storms had not delayed Lord Bracken?s sailing with the Myrish
crossbowmen . . . if Quickfinger had not been caught with the stolen
dragon?s eggs . . . so many/if/ s, ser . . . had any one come out
differently, it could all have turned t?other way. Then we would called
be the loyalists, and the red dragons would be remembered as men who
fought to keep the usurper Daeron the Falseborn upon his stolen throne,
and failed.?

?That?s as it may be, m?lord,? said Dunk, ?but things went the way they
went. It was all years ago, and you were pardoned.?

?Aye, we were pardoned. So long as we bent the knee and gave him a
hostage to ensure our future loyalty, Daeron forgave the traitors and
the rebels.? His voice was bitter. ?I bought my head back with my
daughter?s life. Alysanne was seven when they took her off to King?s
Landing and twenty when she died, a silent sister. I went to King?s
Landing once to see her, and she would not even speak to me, her own
father. A king?s mercy is a poisoned gift. Daeron Targaryen left me
life, but took my pride and dreams and honor.? His hand trembled, and
wine spilled red upon his lap, but the old man took no notice of it. ?I
should have gone with Bittersteel into exile, or died beside my sons and
my sweet king. That would have been a death worthy of a chequy lion
descended from so many proud lords and mighty warriors. Daeron?s mercy
made me smaller.?

/In his heart the black dragon never died,/Dunk realized.

?My lord??

It was Egg?s voice. The boy had come in as Ser Eustace was speaking of
his death. The old knight blinked at him as if he were seeing him for
the first time. ?Yes, lad? What is it??

?If it please you . . . the Red Widow says you rebelled to get her
castle. That isn?t true, is it??

?The castle?? He seemed confused. ?Coldmoat . . . Coldmoat was promised
me by Daemon, yes, but . . . it was not for gain, no . . .?

?Then why?? asked Egg.

?Why?? Ser Eustace frowned.

?Why were you a traitor? If it wasn?t just the castle.?

Ser Eustace looked at Egg a long time before replying. ?You are only a
young boy. You would not understand.?

?Well,? said Egg, ?I might.?

?Treason . . . is only a word. When two princes fight for a chair where
only one may sit, great lords and common men alike must choose. And when
the battle?s done, the victors will be hailed as loyal men and true,
whilst those who were defeated will be known forevermore as rebels and
traitors. That was my fate.?

Egg thought about it for a time. ?Yes, my lord. Only . . . King Daeron
was a good man. Why would you choose Daemon??

?Daeron . . .? Ser Eustace almost slurred the word, and Dunk realized he
was half drunk. ?Daeron was spindly and round of shoulder, with a little
belly that wobbled when he walked. Daemon stood straight and proud, and
his stomach was flat and hard as an oaken shield. And he could/fight/ .
With ax or lance or flail, he was as good as any knight I ever saw, but
with/the sword/ he was the Warrior himself. When Prince Daemon had
Blackfyre in his hand, there was not a man to equal him . . . not Ulrick
Dayne with Dawn, no, nor even the Dragonknight with Dark Sister.

?You can know a man by his friends, Egg. Daeron surrounded himself with
maesters, septons, and singers. Always there were women whispering in
his ear, and his court was full of Dornishmen. How not, when he had
taken a Dornishwoman into his bed, and sold his own sweet sister to the
prince of Dorne, though it was Daemon that she loved? Daeron bore the
same name as the Young Dragon, but when his Dornish wife gave him a son
he named the child Baelor, after the feeblest king who ever sat the Iron
Throne.

?Daemon, though . . . Daemon was no more pious than a king need be, and
all the great knights of the realm gathered to him. It would suit Lord
Bloodraven if their names were all forgotten, so he has forbidden us to
sing of them, but/I/ remember. Robb Reyne, Gareth the Grey, Ser Aubrey
Ambrose, Lord Gormon Peake, Black Byren Flowers, Redtusk, Fireball . .
./Bittersteel!/ I ask you, has there ever been such a noble company,
such a roll of heroes?

?/Why,/lad? You ask me why? Because Daemon was the better man. The old
king saw it, too. He gave the sword to Daemon./Blackfyre,/ the sword of
Aegon the Conquerer, the blade that every Targaryen king had wielded
since the Conquest . . . he put that sword in Daemon?s hand the day he
knighted him, a boy of twelve.?

?My father says that was because Daemon was a swordsman, and Daeron
never was,? said Egg. ?Why give a horse to a man who cannot ride? The
sword was not the kingdom, he says.?

The old knight?s hand jerked so hard that wine spilled from his silver
cup. ?Your father is a fool.?

?He is/not/ ,? the boy said.

Osgrey?s face twisted in anger. ?You asked a question and I answered it,
but I will not suffer insolence. Ser Duncan, you should beat this boy
more often. His courtesy leaves much to be desired. If I must needs do
it myself, I will??

?No,? Dunk broke in. ?You won?t. Ser.? He had made up his mind. ?It is
dark. We will leave at first light.?

Ser Eustace stared at him, stricken. ?Leave??

?Standfast. Your service.?/You lied to us. Call it what you will, there
was no honor in it./ He unfastened his cloak, rolled it up, and put it
in the old man?s lap.

Osgrey?s eyes grew narrow. ?Did that woman offer to take you into
service? Are you leaving me for that whore?s bed??

?I don?t know that she is a whore,? Dunk said, ?or a witch or a poisoner
or none of that. But whatever she may be makes no matter. We?re leaving
for the hedges, not for Coldmoat.?

?The ditches, you mean. You?re leaving me to prowl in the woods like
wolves, to waylay honest men upon the roads.? His hand was shaking. The
cup fell from his fingers, spilling wine as it rolled along the floor.
?Go, then. Go. I want none of you. I should never have taken you on./Go!/ ?

?As you say, ser.? Dunk beckoned, and Egg followed.

 

That last night Dunk wanted to be as far from Eustace Osgrey as he
could, so they slept down in the cellar, amongst the rest of Standfast?s
meager host. It was a restless night. Lem and red-eyed Pate both snored,
the one loudly and the other constantly. Dank vapors filled the cellar,
rising through the trap from the deeper vaults below. Dunk tossed and
turned on the scratchy bed, drifting off into a half sleep only to wake
suddenly in darkness. The bites he?d gotten in the woods were itching
fiercely, and there were fleas in the straw as well./I will be well rid
of this place, well rid of the old man, and Ser Bennis, and the rest of
them./ Maybe it was time that he took Egg back to Summerhall to see his
father. He would ask the boy about that in the morning, when they were
well away.

Morning seemed a long way off, though. Dunk?s head was full of dragons,
red and black . . . full of chequy lions, old shields, battered boots .
. . full of streams and moats and dams, and papers stamped with the
king?s great seal that he could not read.

And/she/ was there as well, the Red Widow, Rohanne of the Coldmoat. He
could see her freckled face, her slender arms, her long red braid. It
made him feel guilty./I should be dreaming of Tanselle. Tanselle
Too-Tall, they called her, but she was not too tall for me./ She had
painted arms upon his shield and he had saved her from the Bright
Prince, but she vanished even before the trial of seven./She could not
bear to see me die,/ Dunk often told himself, but what did he know? He
was as thick as a castle wall. Just thinking of the Red Widow was proof
enough of that./Tanselle smiled at me, but we never held each other,
never kissed, not even lips to cheek./ Rohanne at least had touched him;
he had the swollen lip to prove it./Don?t be daft. She?s not for the
likes of you. She is too small, too clever, and much too dangerous./

Drowsing at long last, Dunk dreamed. He was running through a glade in
the heart of Wat?s Wood, running toward Rohanne, and she was shooting
arrows at him. Each shaft she loosed flew true, and pierced him through
the chest, yet the pain was strangely sweet. He should have turned and
fled, but he ran toward her instead, running slowly as you always did in
dreams, as if the very air had turned to honey. Another arrow came, and
yet another. Her quiver seemed to have no end of shafts. Her eyes were
gray and green and full of mischief./Your gown brings out the color of
your eyes,/ he meant to say to her, but she was not wearing any gown, or
any clothes at all. Across her small breasts was a faint spray of
freckles, and her nipples were red and hard as little berries. The
arrows made him look like some great porcupine as he went stumbling to
her feet, but somehow he still found the strength to grab her braid.
With one hard yank he pulled her down on top of him and kissed her.

He woke suddenly, at the sound of a shout.

In the darkened cellar, all was confusion. Curses and complaints echoed
back and forth, and men were stumbling over one another as they fumbled
for their spears or breeches. No one knew what was happening. Egg found
the tallow candle and got it lit, to shed some light upon the scene.
Dunk was the first one up the steps. He almost collided with Sam Stoops
rushing down, puffing like a bellows and babbling incoherently. Dunk had
to hold him by both shoulders to keep him from falling. ?Sam, what?s wrong??

?The sky,? the old man whimpered. ?The/sky/ !? No more sense could be
gotten from him, so they all went up to the roof for a look. Ser Eustace
was there before them, standing by the parapets in his bedrobe, staring
off into the distance.

The sun was rising in the west.

It was a long moment before Dunk realized what that meant. ?Wat?s Wood
is afire,? he said in a hushed voice. From down at the base of the tower
came the sound of Bennis cursing, a stream of such surpassing filth that
it might have made Aegon the Unworthy blush. Sam Stoops began to pray.

They were too far away to make out flames, but the red glow engulfed
half the western horizon, and above the light the stars were vanishing.
The King?s Crown was half gone already, obscured behind a veil of the
rising smoke.

/Fire and sword, she said./

 

The fire burned until morning. No one in Standfast slept that night.
Before long they could smell the smoke, and see flames dancing in the
distance like girls in scarlet skirts. They all wondered if the fire
would engulf them. Dunk stood behind the parapets, his eyes burning,
watching for riders in the night. ?Bennis,? he said, when the brown
knight came up, chewing on his sourleaf, ?it?s you she wants. Might be
you should go.?

?What, run?? he brayed. ?On/my/ horse? Might as well try to fly off on
one o? these damned chickens.?

?Then give yourself up. She?ll only slit your nose.?

?I like my nose how it is, lunk. Let her try and take me, we?ll see what
gets slit open.? He sat cross-legged with his back against a merlon and
took a whetstone from his pouch to sharpen his sword. Ser Eustace stood
above him. In low voices, they spoke of how to fight the war. ?The
Longinch will expect us at the dam,? Dunk heard the old knight say, ?so
we will burn her crops instead. Fire for fire.? Ser Bennis thought that
would be just the thing, only maybe they should put her mill to the
torch as well. ?It?s six leagues on t?other side o? the castle, the
Longinch won?t be looking for us there. Burn the mill and kill the
miller, that?ll cost her dear.?

Egg was listening, too. He coughed, and looked at Dunk with wide white
eyes. ?Ser, you have to stop them.?

?How?? Dunk asked./The Red Widow will stop them. Her, and that Lucas the
Longinch./ ?They?re only making noise, Egg. It?s that, or piss their
breeches. And it?s naught to do with us now.?

Dawn came with hazy gray skies and air that burned the eyes. Dunk meant
to make an early start, though after their sleepless night he did not
know how far they?d get. He and Egg broke their fast on boiled eggs
while Bennis was rousting the others outside for more drill./They are
Osgrey men and we are not,/ he told himself. He ate four of the eggs.
Ser Eustace owed him that much, as he saw it. Egg ate two. They washed
them down with ale.

?We could go to Fair Isle, ser,? the boy said as they were gathering up
their things. ?If they?re being raided by the ironmen, Lord Farman might
be looking for some swords.?

It was a good thought. ?Have you ever been to Fair Isle??

?No, ser,? Egg said, ?but they say it?s fair. Lord Farman?s seat is
fair, too. It?s called Faircastle.?

Dunk laughed. ?Faircastle it shall be.? He felt as if a great weight had
been lifted off his shoulders. ?I?ll see to the horses,? he said, when
he?d tied his armor up in a bundle, secured with hempen rope. ?Go to the
roof and get our bedrolls, squire.? The last thing he wanted this
morning was another confrontation with the chequy lion. ?If you see Ser
Eustace, let him be.?

?I will, ser.?

Outside, Bennis had his recruits lined up with their spears and shields,
and was trying to teach them to advance in unison. The brown knight paid
Dunk not the slightest heed as he crossed the yard./He will lead the
whole lot of them to death. The Red Widow could be here any moment./ Egg
came bursting from the tower door and clattered down the wooden steps
with their bedrolls. Above him, Ser Eustace stood stiffly on the
balcony, his hands resting on the parapet. When his eyes met Dunk?s his
mustache quivered, and he quickly turned away. The air was hazy with
blowing smoke.

Bennis had his shield slung across his back, a tall kite shield of
unpainted wood, dark with countless layers of old varnish and girded all
about with iron. It bore no blazon, only a center bosse that reminded
Dunk of some great eye, shut tight./As blind as he is./ ?How do you mean
to fight her?? Dunk asked.

Ser Bennis looked at his soldiers, his mouth running red with sourleaf.
?Can?t hold the hill with so few spears. Got to be the tower. We all
hole up inside.? He nodded at the door. ?Only one way in. Haul up them
wooden steps, and there?s no way they can reach us.?

?Until they build some steps of their own. They might bring ropes and
grapnels, too, and swarm down on you through the roof. Unless they just
stand back with their crossbows and fill you full of quarrels while
you?re trying to hold the door.?

The Melons, Beans, and Barleycorns were listening to all they said. All
their brave talk had blown away, though there was no breath of wind.
They stood clutching their sharpened sticks, looking at Dunk and Bennis
and each other.

?This lot won?t do you a lick of good,? Dunk said, with a nod at the
ragged Osgrey army. ?The Red Widow?s knights will cut them to pieces if
you leave them in the open, and their spears won?t be any use inside
that tower.?

?They can chuck things off the roof,? said Bennis. ?Treb is good at
chucking rocks.?

?He could chuck a rock or two, I suppose,? said Dunk, ?until one of the
Widow?s crossbowmen puts a bolt through him.?

?Ser?? Egg stood beside him. ?Ser, if we mean to go, we?d best be gone,
in case the Widow comes.?

The boy was right./If we linger, we?ll be trapped here./ Yet still Dunk
hesitated. ?Let them go, Bennis.?

?What, lose our valiant lads?? Bennis looked at the peasants, and brayed
laughter. ?Don?t you lot be getting any notions,? he warned them. ?I?ll
gut any man who tries to run.?

?Try, and I?ll gut you.? Dunk drew his sword. ?Go home, all of you,? he
told the smallfolk. ?Go back to your villages, and see if the fire?s
spared your homes and crops.?

No one moved. The brown knight stared at him, his mouth working. Dunk
ignored him. ?Go,? he told the smallfolk once again. It was as if some
god had put the word into his mouth./Not the Warrior. Is there a god for
fools?/ ?GO!? he said again, roaring it this time. ?Take your spears and
shields, but/go/ , or you won?t live to see the morrow. Do you want to
kiss your wives again? Do you want to hold your children?/Go home!/ Have
you all gone deaf??

They hadn?t. A mad scramble ensued amongst the chickens. Big Rob trod on
a hen as he made his dash, and Pate came within half a foot of
disemboweling Will Bean when his own spear tripped him up, but off they
went, running. The Melons went one way, the Beans another, the
Barleycorns a third. Ser Eustace was shouting down at them from above,
but no one paid him any mind./They are deaf to him at least,/ Dunk thought.

By the time the old knight emerged from his tower and came scrambling
down the steps, only Dunk and Egg and Bennis remained among the
chickens. ?Come back,? Ser Eustace shouted at his fast-fleeing host.
?You do not have my leave to go./You do not have my leave!?/

?No use, m?lord,? said Bennis. ?They?re gone.?

Ser Eustace rounded on Dunk, his mustache quivering with rage. ?You had
no right to send them away./No right!/I told them not to go, I/forbade/
it. I/forbade/ you to dismiss them.?

?We never heard you, my lord.? Egg took off his hat to fan away the
smoke. ?The chickens were cackling too loud.?

The old man sank down onto Standfast?s lowest step. ?What did that woman
offer you to deliver me to her?? he asked Dunk in a bleak voice. ?How
much gold did she give you to betray me, to send my lads away and leave
me here alone??

?You?re not alone, m?lord.? Dunk sheathed his sword. ?I slept beneath
your roof, and ate your eggs this morning. I owe you some service still.
I won?t go slinking off with my tail between my legs. My sword?s still
here.? He touched the hilt.

?One sword.? The old knight got slowly to his feet. ?What can one sword
hope to do against that woman??

?Try and keep her off your land, to start with.? Dunk wished he were as
certain as he sounded.

The old knight?s mustache trembled every time he took a breath. ?Yes,?
he said at last. ?Better to go boldly than hide behind stone walls.
Better to die a lion than a rabbit. We were the Marshalls of the
Northmarch for a thousand years. I must have my armor.? He started up
the steps.

Egg was looking up at Dunk. ?I never knew you had a tail, ser,? the boy
said.

?Do you want a clout in the ear??

?No, ser. Do you want your armor??

?That,? Dunk said, ?and one thing more.?

 

There was talk of Ser Bennis coming with them, but in the end Ser
Eustace commanded him to stay and hold the tower. His sword would be of
little use against the odds that they were like to face, and the sight
of him would inflame the Widow further.

The brown knight did not require much convincing. Dunk helped him knock
loose the iron pegs that held the upper steps in place. Bennis clambered
up them, untied the old gray hempen rope, and hauled on it with all his
strength. Creaking and groaning, the wooden stair swung upward, leaving
ten feet of air between the top stone step and the tower?s only
entrance. Sam Stoops and his wife were both inside. The chickens would
need to fend for themselves. Sitting below on his gray gelding, Ser
Eustace called up to say, ?If we have not returned by nightfall . . .?

?. . . I?ll ride for Highgarden, m?lord, and tell Lord Tyrell how that
woman burned your wood and murdered you.?

Dunk followed Egg and Maester down the hill. The old man came after, his
armor rattling softly. For once a wind was rising, and he could hear the
flapping of his cloak.

Where Wat?s Wood had stood they found a smoking wasteland. The fire had
largely burned itself out by the time they reached the wood, but here
and there a few patches were still burning, fiery islands in a sea of
ash and cinders. Elsewhere the trunks of burned trees thrust like
blackened spears into the sky. Other trees had fallen and lay athwart
the west way with limbs charred and broken, dull red fires smoldering
inside their hollow hearts. There were hot spots on the forest floor as
well, and places where the smoke hung in the air like a hot gray haze.
Ser Eustace was stricken with a fit of coughing, and for a few moments
Dunk feared the old man would need to turn back, but finally it passed.

They rode past the carcass of a red deer, and later on what might have
been a badger. Nothing lived, except the flies. Flies could live through
anything, it seemed.

?The Field of Fire must have looked like this,? Ser Eustace said. ?It
was there our woes began, two hundred years ago. The last of the green
kings perished on that field, with the finest flowers of the Reach
around him. My father said the dragonfire burned so hot that their
swords melted in their hands. Afterward the blades were gathered up, and
went to make the Iron Throne. Highgarden passed from kings to stewards,
and the Osgreys dwindled and diminished, until the Marshalls of the
Northmarch were no more than landed knights bound in fealty to the Rowans.?

Dunk had nothing to say to that, so they rode in silence for a time,
till Ser Eustace coughed, and said, ?Ser Duncan, do you remember the
story that I told you??

?I might, ser,? said Dunk. ?Which one??

?The Little Lion.?

?I remember. He was the youngest of five sons.?

?Good.? He coughed again. ?When he slew Lancel Lannister, the westermen
turned back. Without the king there was no war. Do you understand what I
am saying??

?Aye,? Dunk said reluctantly./Could I kill a woman?/ For once Dunk
wished he/were/ as thick as that castle wall./It must not come to that.
I must not let it come to that./

A few green trees still stood where the west way crossed the Chequy
Water. Their trunks were charred and blackened on one side. Just beyond,
the water glimmered darkly./Blue and green,/ Dunk thought,/but all the
gold is gone./ The smoke had veiled the sun.

Ser Eustace halted when he reached the water?s edge. ?I took a holy vow.
I will not cross that stream. Not so long as the land beyond is/hers/ .?
The old knight wore mail and plate beneath his yellowed surcoat. His
sword was on his hip.

?What if she never comes, ser?? Egg asked.

/With fire and sword,/Dunk thought. ?She?ll come.?

She did, and within the hour. They heard her horses first, and then the
faint metallic sound of clinking armor, growing louder. The drifting
smoke made it hard to tell how far off they were, until her banner
bearer pushed through the ragged gray curtain. His staff was crowned by
an iron spider painted white and red, with the black banner of the
Webbers hanging listlessly beneath. When he saw them across the water,
he halted on the bank. Ser Lucas Inchfield appeared half a heartbeat
later, armored head to heel.

Only then did Lady Rohanne herself appear, astride a coal-black mare
decked out in strands of silverly silk, like unto a spider?s web. The
Widow?s cloak was made of the same stuff. It billowed from her shoulders
and her wrists, as light as air. She was armored, too, in a suit of
green enamel scale chased with gold and silver. It fit her figure like a
glove, and made her look as if she were garbed in summer leaves. Her
long red braid hung down behind her, bouncing as she rode. Septon Sefton
rode red-faced at her side, atop a big gray gelding. On her other side
was her young maester, Cerrick, mounted on a mule.

More knights came after, half a dozen of them, attended by as many
esquires. A column of mounted crossbowmen brought up the rear, and
fanned out to either side of the road when they reached the Chequy Water
and saw Dunk waiting on the other side. There were three-and-thirty
fighting men all told, excluding the septon, the maester, and the Widow
herself. One of the knights caught Dunk?s eye; a squat bald keg of a man
in mail and leather, with an angry face and an ugly goiter on his neck.

The Red Widow walked her mare to the edge of the water. ?Ser Eustace,
Ser Duncan,? she called across the stream, ?we saw your fire burning in
the night.?

?Saw it?? Ser Eustace shouted back. ?Aye, you saw it . . . after you
made it.?

?That is a vile accusation.?

?For a vile act.?

?I was asleep in my bed last night, with my ladies all around me. The
shouts from the walls awoke me, as they did almost everyone. Old men
climbed up steep tower steps to look, and babes at the breast saw the
red light and wept in fear. And that is all I know of your fire, ser.?

?It was your fire, woman,? insisted Ser Eustace. ?My wood is
gone./Gone,/ I say!?

Septon Sefton cleared his throat. ?Ser Eustace,? he boomed, ?there are
fires in the kingswood too, and even in the rainwood. The drought has
turned all our woods to kindling.?

Lady Rohanne raised an arm and pointed. ?Look at my fields, Osgrey. How
dry they are. I would have been a fool to set a fire. Had the wind
changed direction, the flames might well have leapt the stream, and
burned out half my crops.?

?Might have?? Ser Eustace shouted. ?It was my woods that burned, and you
that burned them. Most like you cast some witch?s spell to drive the
wind, just as you used your dark arts to slay your husbands and your
brothers!?

Lady Rohanne?s face grew harder. Dunk had seen that look at Coldmoat,
just before she slapped him. ?Prattle,? she told the old man. ?I will
waste no more words on you, ser. Produce Bennis of the Brown Shield, or
we will come and take him.?

?That you shall not do,? Ser Eustace declared in ringing tones. ?That
you shall/never/ do.? His mustache twitched. ?Come no farther. This side
of the stream is mine, and you are not wanted here. You shall have no
hospitality from me. No bread and salt, not even shade and water. You
come as an intruder. I forbid you to set foot on Osgrey land.?

Lady Rohanne drew her braid over her shoulder. ?Ser Lucas,? was all she
said. The Longinch made a gesture, the crossbowmen dismounted, winched
back their bowstrings with the help of hook and stirrup, and plucked
quarrels from their quivers. ?Now, ser,? her ladyship called out, when
every bow was nocked and raised and ready, ?what was it you forbade me??

Dunk had heard enough. ?If you cross the stream without leave, you are
breaking the king?s peace.?

Septon Sefton urged his horse forward a step. ?The king will neither
know nor care,? he called. ?We are all the Mother?s children, ser. For
her sake, stand aside.?

Dunk frowned. ?I don?t know much of gods, septon . . . but aren?t we the
Warrior?s children, too?? He rubbed the back of his neck. ?If you try to
cross, I?ll stop you.?

Ser Lucas the Longinch laughed. ?Here?s a hedge knight who yearns to be
a hedgehog, my lady,? he said to the Red Widow. ?Say the word, and we?ll
put a dozen quarrels in him. At this distance they will punch through
that armor like it was made of spit.?

?No. Not yet, ser.? Lady Rohanne studied him from across the stream.
?You are two men and a boy. We are three-and-thirty. How do you propose
to stop us crossing??

?Well,? said Dunk, ?I?ll tell you. But only you.?

?As you wish.? She pressed her heels into her horse and rode her out
into the stream. When the water reached the mare?s belly, she halted,
waiting. ?Here I am. Come closer, ser. I promise not to sew you in a sack.?

Ser Eustace grasped Dunk by the arm before he could respond. ?Go to
her,? the old knight said, ?but remember the Little Lion.?

?As you say, m?lord.? Dunk walked Thunder down into the water. He drew
up beside her and said, ?M?lady.?

?Ser Duncan.? She reached up and laid two fingers on his swollen lip.
?Did I do this, ser??

?No one else has slapped my face of late, m?lady.?

?That was bad of me. A breach of hospitality. The good septon has been
scolding me.? She gazed across the water at Ser Eustace. ?I scarce
remember Addam any longer. It was more than half my life ago. I remember
that I loved him, though. I have not loved any of the others.?

?His father put him in the blackberries, with his brothers,? Dunk said.
?He was fond of blackberries.?

?I remember. He used to pick them for me, and we?d eat them in a bowl of
cream.?

?The king pardoned the old man for Daemon,? said Dunk. ?It is past time
you pardoned him for Addam.?

?Give me Bennis, and I?ll consider that.?

?Bennis is not mine to give.?

She sighed. ?I would as lief not have to kill you.?

?I would as lief not die.?

?Then give me Bennis. We?ll cut his nose off and hand him back, and that
will be the end of that.?

?It won?t, though,? Dunk said. ?There?s still the dam to deal with, and
the fire. Will you give us the men who set it??

?There were lantern bugs in that wood,? she said. ?It may be they set
the fire off, with their little lanterns.?

?No more teasing now, m?lady,? Dunk warned her. ?This is no time for it.
Tear down the dam, and let Ser Eustace have the water to make up for the
wood. That?s fair, is it not??

?It might be, if I had burned the wood. Which I did not. I was at
Coldmoat, safe abed.? She looked down at the water. ?What is there to
prevent us from riding right across the stream? Have you scattered
caltrops amongst the rocks? Hidden archers in the ashes? Tell me what
you think is going to stop us.?

?Me.? He pulled one gauntlet off. ?In Flea Bottom I was always bigger
and stronger than the other boys, so I used to beat them bloody and
steal from them. The old man taught me not to do that. It was wrong, he
said, and besides, sometimes little boys have great big brothers. Here,
have a look at this.? Dunk twisted the ring off his finger and held it
out to her. She had to let loose of her braid to take it.

?Gold?? she said, when she felt the weight of it. ?What is this, ser??
She turned it over in her hand. ?A signet. Gold and onyx.? Her green
eyes narrowed as she studied the seal. ?Where did you find this, ser??

?In a boot. Wrapped in rags and stuffed up in the toe.?

Lady Rohanne?s fingers closed around it. She glanced at Egg and old Ser
Eustace. ?You took a great risk in showing me this ring, ser. But how
does it avail us? If I should command my men to cross . . .?

?Well,? said Dunk, ?that would mean I?d have to fight.?

?And die.?

?Most like,? he said, ?and then Egg would go back where he comes from,
and tell what happened here.?

?Not if he died as well.?

?I don?t think you?d kill a boy of ten,? he said, hoping he was right.
?Not/this/ boy of ten, you wouldn?t. You?ve got three-and-thirty men
there, like you said. Men talk. That fat one there especially. No matter
how deep you dug the graves, the tale would out. And then, well . . .
might be a spotted spider?s bite can kill a lion, but a dragon is a
different sort of beast.?

?I would sooner be the dragon?s friend.? She tried the ring on her
finger. It was too big even for her thumb. ?Dragon or no, I must have
Bennis of the Brown Shield.?

?No.?

?You are seven feet of stubborn.?

?Less an inch.?

She gave him back the ring. ?I cannot return to Coldmoat empty-handed.
They will say the Red Widow has lost her bite, that she was too weak to
do justice, that she could not protect her smallfolk. You do not
understand, ser.?

?I might.?/Better than you know./ ?I remember once some little lord in
the stormlands took Ser Arlan into service, to help him fight some other
little lord. When I asked the old man what they were fighting over, he
said, ?Nothing, lad. It?s just some pissing contest.? ?

Lady Rohanne gave him a shocked look, but could sustain it no more than
half a heartbeat before it turned into a grin. ?I have heard a thousand
empty courtesies in my time, but you are the first knight who ever
said/pissing/ in my presence.? Her freckled face went somber. ?Those
pissing contests are how lords judge one another?s strength, and woe to
any man who shows his weakness. A woman must needs piss twice as hard,
if she hopes to rule. And if that woman should happen to be/small/ . . .
Lord Stackhouse covets my Horseshoe Hills, Ser Clifford Conklyn has an
old claim to Leafy Lake, those dismal Durwells live by stealing cattle .
. . and beneath mine own roof I have the Longinch. Every day I wake
wondering if this might be the day he marries me by force.? Her hand
curled tight around her braid, as hard as if it were a rope, and she was
dangling over a precipice. ?He wants to, I know. He holds back for fear
of my wroth, just as Conklyn and Stackhouse and the Durwells tread
carefully where the Red Widow is concerned. If any of them thought for a
moment that I had turned weak and soft . . .?

Dunk put the ring back on his finger, and drew his dagger.

The widow?s eyes went wide at the sight of naked steel. ?What are you
doing?? she said. ?Have you lost your/wits/ ? There are a dozen
crossbows trained on you.?

?You wanted blood for blood.? He laid the dagger against his cheek.
?They told you wrong. It wasn?t Bennis cut that digger, it was me.? He
pressed the edge of the steel into his face, slashed downward. When he
shook the blood off the blade, some spattered on her face./More
freckles,/ he thought. ?There, the Red Widow has her due. A cheek for a
cheek.?

?You are quite mad.? The smoke had filled her eyes with tears. ?If you
were better born, I?d marry you.?

?Aye, m?lady. And if pigs had wings and scales and breathed flame,
they?d be as good as dragons.? Dunk slid the knife back in its sheath.
His face had begun to throb. The blood ran down his cheek and dripped
onto his gorget. The smell made Thunder snort, and paw the water. ?Give
me the men who burned the wood.?

?No one burned the wood,? she said, ?but if some man of mine had done
so, it must have been to please me. How could I give such a man to you??
She glanced back at her escort. ?It would be best if Ser Eustace were
just to withdraw his accusation.?

?Those pigs will be breathing fire first, m?lady.?

?In that case, I must assert my innocence before the eyes of gods and
men. Tell Ser Eustace that I demand an apology . . . or a trial. The
choice is his.? She wheeled her horse about to ride back to her men.

 

The stream would be their battleground.

Septon Sefton waddled out and said a prayer, beseeching the Father Above
to look down on these two men and judge them justly, asking the Warrior
to lend his strength to the man whose cause was just and true, begging
the Mother?s mercy for the liar, that he might be forgiven for his sins.
When the praying was over and done with, he turned to Ser Eustace Osgrey
one last time. ?Ser,? he said, ?I beg you once again, withdraw your
accusation.?

?I will not,? the old man said, his mustache trembling.

The fat septon turned to Lady Rohanne. ?Good-sister, if you did this
thing, confess your guilt, and offer good Ser Eustace some restitution
for his wood. Elsewise blood must flow.?

?My champion will prove my innocence before the eyes of gods and men.?

?Trial by battle is not the only way,? said the septon, waist-deep in
the water. ?Let us go to Goldengrove, I implore you both, and place the
matter before Lord Rowan for his judgment.?

/?Never,?/said Ser Eustace. The Red Widow shook her head.

Ser Lucas Inchfield looked at Lady Rohanne, his face dark with fury.
?You/will/ marry me when this mummer?s farce is done. As your lord
father wished.?

?My lord father never knew you as I do,? she gave back.

Dunk went to one knee beside Egg, and put the signet back in the boy?s
hand; four three-headed dragons, two and two, the arms of Maekar, Prince
of Summerhall. ?Back in the boot,? he said, ?but if it happens that I
die, go to the nearest of your father?s friends and have him take you
back to Summerhall. Don?t try to cross the whole Reach on your own. See
you don?t forget, or my ghost will come and clout you in the ear.?

?Yes, ser,? said Egg, ?but I?d sooner you didn?t die.?

?It?s too hot to die.? Dunk donned his helm, and Egg helped him fasten
it tightly to his gorget. The blood was sticky on his face, though Ser
Eustace had torn a piece off his cloak to help stop the gash from
bleeding. He rose and went to Thunder. Most of the smoke had blown away,
he saw as he swung up onto the saddle, but the sky was still
dark./Clouds,/ he thought,/dark clouds./ It had been so long./Maybe it?s
an omen. But is it his omen, or mine?/ Dunk was no good with omens.

Across the stream, Ser Lucas had mounted up as well. His horse was a
chestnut courser; a splendid animal, swift and strong, but not as large
as Thunder. What the horse lacked in size he made up for in armor,
though; he was clad in crinet, chanfron, and a coat of light chain. The
Longinch himself wore black enameled plate and silvery ringmail. An onyx
spider squatted malignantly atop his helmet, but his shield displayed
his own arms: a bend sinister, chequy black and white, on a pale gray
field. Dunk watched Ser Lucas hand it to a squire./He does not mean to
use it./ When another squire delivered him a poleax, he knew why. The ax
was long and lethal, with a banded haft, a heavy head, and a wicked
spike on its back, but it was a two-handed weapon. The Longinch would
need to trust in his armor to protect him./I need to make him rue that
choice./

His own shield was on his left arm, the shield Tanselle had painted with
his elm and falling star. A child?s rhyme echoed in his head./Oak and
iron, guard me well, or else I?m dead, and doomed to hell./ He slid his
longsword from its scabbard. The weight of it felt good in his hands.

He put his heels into Thunder?s flanks and walked the big destrier down
into the water. Across the stream, Ser Lucas did the same. Dunk pressed
right, so as to present the Longinch with his left side, protected by
his shield. That was not something Ser Lucas was willing to concede him.
He turned his courser quickly, and they came together in a tumult of
gray steel and green spray. Ser Lucas struck with his poleax. Dunk had
to twist in the saddle to catch it on his shield. The force of it shot
down his arm and jarred his teeth together. He swung his sword in
answer, a sideways cut that took the other knight beneath his upraised
arm. Steel screamed on steel, and it was on.

The Longinch spurred his courser in a circle, trying to get around to
Dunk?s unprotected side, but Thunder wheeled to meet him, snapping at
the other horse. Ser Lucas delivered one crashing blow after another,
standing in his stirrups to get all his weight and strength behind the
axhead. Dunk shifted his shield to catch each blow as it came. Half
crouched beneath its oak, he hacked at Inchfield?s arms and side and
legs, but his plate turned every stroke. Around they went, and around
again, the water lapping at their legs. The Longinch attacked, and Dunk
defended, watching for a weakness.

Finally he saw it. Every time Ser Lucas lifted his ax for another blow,
a gap appeared beneath his arm. There was mail and leather there, and
padding underneath, but no steel plate. Dunk kept his shield up, trying
to time his attack./Soon. Soon./ The ax crashed down, wrenched free,
came up./Now!/ He slammed his spurs into Thunder, driving him closer,
and thrust with his longsword, to drive his point through the opening.

But the gap vanished as quick as it had appeared. His swordpoint scraped
a rondel, and Dunk, overextended, almost lost his seat. The ax descended
with a crash, slanting off the iron rim of Dunk?s shield, crunching
against the side of his helm, and striking Thunder a glancing blow along
the neck.

The destrier screamed and reared up on two legs, his eye rolling white
in pain as the sharp coppery smell of blood filled the air. He lashed
out with his iron hooves just as the Longinch was moving in. One caught
Ser Lucas in the face, the other on a shoulder. Then the heavy warhorse
came down atop his courser.

It all happened in a heartbeat. The two horses went down in a tangle,
kicking and biting at each other, churning up the water and the mud
below. Dunk tried to throw himself from the saddle, but one foot tangled
in a stirrup. He fell face first, sucking down one desperate gulp of air
before the stream came rushing into the helm through the eyeslit. His
foot was still caught up, and he felt a savage yank as Thunder?s
struggles almost pulled his leg out of its socket. Just as quickly he
was free, turning, sinking. For a moment he flailed helplessly in the
water. The world was blue and green and brown.

The weight of his armor pulled him down until his shoulder bumped the
streambed./If that is down the other way is up./ Dunk?s steel-clad hands
fumbled at the stones and sands, and somehow he gathered his legs up
under him and stood. He was reeling, dripping mud, with water pouring
from the breath holes in his dinted helm, but he was standing. He sucked
down air.

His battered shield still clung to his left arm, but his scabbard was
empty and his sword was gone. There was blood inside his helm as well as
water. When he tried to shift his weight, his ankle sent a lance of pain
right up his leg. Both horses had struggled back to their feet, he saw.
He turned his head, squinting one-eyed through a veil of blood,
searching for his foe./Gone,/ he thought,/he?s drowned, or Thunder
crushed his skull in./

Ser Lucas burst up out of the water right in front of him, sword in
hand. He struck Dunk?s neck a savage blow, and only the thickness of his
gorget kept his head upon his shoulders. He had no blade to answer with,
only his shield. He gave ground, and the Longinch came after, screaming
and slashing. Dunk?s upraised arm took a numbing blow above the elbow. A
cut to his hip made him grunt in pain. As he backed away, a rock turned
beneath his foot, and he went down to one knee, chest-high in the water.
He got his shield up, but this time Ser Lucas struck so hard he split
the thick oak right down the middle, and drove the remnants back into
Dunk?s face. His ears were ringing and his mouth was full of blood, but
somewhere far away he heard Egg screaming. ?Get him, ser, get him, get
him, he?s/right there!/ ?

Dunk dived forward. Ser Lucas had wrenched his sword free for another
cut. Dunk slammed into him waist-high and knocked him off his feet. The
stream swallowed both of them again, but this time Dunk was ready. He
kept one arm around the Longinch and forced him to the bottom. Bubbles
came streaming out from behind Inchfield?s battered, twisted visor, but
still he fought. He found a rock at the bottom of the stream and began
hammering at Dunk?s head and hands. Dunk fumbled at his swordbelt./Have
I lost the dagger too?/ he wondered. No, there it was. His hand closed
around the hilt and he wrenched it free, and drove it slowly through the
churning water, through the iron rings and boiled leather beneath the
arm of Lucas the Longinch, turning it as he pushed. Ser Lucas jerked and
twisted, and the strength left him. Dunk shoved away and floated. His
chest was on fire. A fish flashed past his face, long and white and
slender./What?s that?/ he wondered./What?s that? What?s that?/

 

He woke in the wrong castle.

When his eyes opened, he did not know where he was. It was blessedly
cool. The taste of blood was in his mouth and he had a cloth across his
eyes, a heavy cloth fragrant with some unguent. It smelled of cloves, he
thought.

Dunk groped at his face, pulled the cloth away. Above him torchlight
played against a high ceiling. Ravens were walking on the rafters
overhead, peering down with small black eyes and/quork/ ing at him./I am
not blind, at least./ He was in a maester?s tower. The walls were lined
with racks of herbs and potions in earthen jars and vessels of green
glass. A long trestle table nearby was covered with parchments, books,
and queer bronze instruments, all spattered with droppings from the
ravens in the rafters. He could hear them muttering at one another.

He tried to sit. It proved a bad mistake. His head swam, and his left
leg screamed in agony when he put the slightest weight upon it. His
ankle was wrapped in linen, he saw, and there were linen strips around
his chest and shoulders, too.

?Be still.? A face appeared above him, young and pinched, with dark
brown eyes on either side of a hooked nose. Dunk knew that face. The man
who owned it was all in gray, with a chain collar hanging loose about
his neck, a maester?s chain of many metals. Dunk grabbed him by the
wrist. ?Where? . . .?

?Coldmoat,? said the maester. ?You were too badly injured to return to
Standfast, so Lady Rohanne commanded us to bring you here. Drink this.?
He raised a cup of . . . something . . . to Dunk?s lips. The potion had
a bitter taste, like vinegar, but at least it washed away the taste of
blood.

Dunk made himself drink it all. Afterward he flexed the fingers of his
sword hand, and then the other./At least my hands still work, and my
arms./ ?What . . . what did I hurt??

?What not?? The maester snorted. ?A broken ankle, a sprained knee, a
broken collarbone, bruising . . . your upper torso is largely green and
yellow and your right arm is a purply black. I thought your skull was
cracked as well, but it appears not. There is that gash in your face,
ser. You will have a scar, I fear. Oh, and you had drowned by the time
we pulled you from the water.?

?Drowned?? said Dunk.

?I never suspected that one man could swallow so much water, not even a
man as large as you, ser. Count yourself fortunate that I am ironborn.
The priests of the Drowned God know how to drown a man and bring him
back, and I have made a study of their beliefs and customs.?

/I drowned./Dunk tried to sit again, but the strength was not in him./I
drowned in water that did not even come up to my neck./ He laughed, then
groaned in pain. ?Ser Lucas??

?Dead. Did you doubt it??

/No./Dunk doubted many things, but not that. He remembered how the
strength had gone out of the Longinch?s limbs, all at once. ?Egg,? he
got out. ?I want Egg.?

?Hunger is a good sign,? the maester said, ?but it is sleep you need
just now, not food.?

Dunk shook his head, and regretted it at once. ?Egg is my squire . . .?

?Is he? A brave lad, and stronger than he looks. He was the one to pull
you from the stream. He helped us get that armor off you, too, and rode
with you in the wayn when we brought you here. He would not sleep
himself, but sat by your side with your sword across his lap, in case
someone tried to do you harm. He even suspected/me/ , and insisted that
I taste anything I meant to feed you. A queer child, but devoted.?

?Where is he??

?Ser Eustace asked the boy to attend him at the wedding feast. There was
no one else on his side. It would have been discourteous for him to refuse.?

?Wedding feast?? Dunk did not understand.

?You would not know, of course. Coldmoat and Standfast were reconciled
after your battle. Lady Rohanne begged leave of old Ser Eustace to cross
his land and visit Addam?s grave, and he granted her that right. She
knelt before the blackberries and began to weep, and he was so moved
that he went to comfort her. They spent the whole night talking of young
Addam and my lady?s noble father. Lord Wyman and Ser Eustace were fast
friends, until the Blackfyre Rebellion. His lordship and my lady were
wed this morning, by our good Septon Sefton. Eustace Osgrey is the lord
of Coldmoat, and his chequy lion flies beside the Webber spider on every
tower and wall.?

Dunk?s world was spinning slowly all around him./That potion. He?s put
me back to sleep./ He closed his eyes, and let all the pain drain out of
him. He could hear the ravens/quork/ ing and screaming at each other,
and the sound of his own breath, and something else as well . . . a
softer sound, steady, heavy, somehow soothing. ?What?s that?? he
murmured sleepily. ?That sound? . . .?

?That?? The maester listened. ?That?s just rain.?

 

He did not see her till the day they took their leave.

?This is folly, ser,? Septon Sefton complained, as Dunk limped heavily
across the yard, swinging his splinted foot and leaning on a crutch.
?Maester Cerrick says you are not half healed as yet, and this rain . .
. you?re like to catch a chill, if you do not drown again. At least wait
for the rain to stop.?

?That may be years.? Dunk was grateful to the fat septon, who had
visited him near every day . . . to pray for him, ostensibly, though
more time seemed to be taken up with tales and gossip. He would miss his
loose and lively tongue and cheerful company, but that changed nothing.
?I need to go.?

The rain was lashing down around them, a thousand cold gray whips upon
his back. His cloak was already sodden. It was the white wool cloak Ser
Eustace had given him, with the green-and-gold-checkered border. The old
knight had pressed it on him once again, as a parting gift. ?For your
courage and leal service, ser,? he said. The brooch that pinned the
cloak at his shoulder was a gift as well; an ivory spider brooch with
silver legs. Clusters of crushed garnets made spots upon its back.

?I hope this is not some mad quest to hunt down Bennis,? Septon Sefton
said. ?You are so bruised and battered that I would fear for you, if
that one found you in such a state.?

/Bennis,/Dunk thought bitterly,/bloody Bennis/ . While Dunk had been
making his stand at the stream, Bennis had tied up Sam Stoops and his
wife, ransacked Standfast from top to bottom, and made off with every
item of value he could find, from candles, clothes, and weaponry to
Osgrey?s old silver cup and a small cache of coin the old man had hidden
in his solar behind a mildewed tapestry. One day Dunk hoped to meet Ser
Bennis of the Brown Shield again, and when he did . . . ?Bennis will keep.?

?Where will you go?? The septon was panting heavily. Even with Dunk on a
crutch, he was too fat to match his pace.

?Fair Isle. Harrenhal. The Trident. There are hedges everywhere.? He
shrugged. ?I?ve always wanted to see the Wall.?

?The Wall?? The septon jerked to a stop. ?I despair of you, Ser Duncan!?
he shouted, standing in the mud with outspread hands as the rain came
down around him. ?Pray, ser, pray for the Crone to light your way!? Dunk
kept walking.

She was waiting for him inside the stables, standing by the yellow bales
of hay in a gown as green as summer. ?Ser Duncan,? she said when he came
pushing through the door. Her red braid hung down in front, the end of
it brushing against her thighs. ?It is good to see you on your feet.?

/You never saw me on my back,/he thought. ?M?lady. What brings you to
the stables. It?s a wet day for a ride.?

?I might say the same to you.?

?Egg told you??/I owe him another clout in the ear./

?Be glad he did, or I would have sent men after you to drag you back. It
was cruel of you to try and steal away without so much as a farewell.?

She had never come to see him while he was in Maester Cerrick?s care,
not once. ?That green becomes you well, m?lady,? he said. ?It brings out
the color of your eyes.? He shifted his weight awkwardly on the crutch.
?I?m here for my horse.?

?You do not need to go. There is a place for you here, when you?re
recovered. Captain of my guards. And Egg can join my other squires. No
one need ever know who he is.?

?Thank you, m?lady, but no.? Thunder was in a stall a dozen places down.
Dunk hobbled toward him.

?Please reconsider, ser. These are perilous times, even for dragons and
their friends. Stay until you?ve healed.? She walked along beside him.
?It would please Lord Eustace, too. He is very fond of you.?

?Very fond,? Dunk agreed. ?If his daughter weren?t dead, he?d want me to
marry her. Then you could be my lady mother. I never had a mother, much
less a/lady/ mother.?

For half a heartbeat Lady Rohanne looked as though she was going to slap
him again./Maybe she?ll just kick my crutch away./

?You are angry with me, ser,? she said instead. ?You must let me make
amends.?

?Well,? he said, ?you could help me saddle Thunder.?

?I had something else in mind.? She reached out her hand for his, a
freckled hand, her fingers strong and slender./I?ll bet she?s freckled
all over./ ?How well do you know horses??

?I ride one.?

?An old destrier bred for battle, slow-footed and ill-tempered. Not a
horse to ride from place to place.?

?If I need to get from place to place, it?s him or these.? Dunk pointed
at his feet.

?You have large feet,? she observed. ?Large hands as well. I think you
must be large all over. Too large for most palfreys. They?d look like
ponies with you perched upon their backs. Still, a swifter mount would
serve you well. A big courser, with some Dornish sand steed for
endurance.? She pointed to the stall across from Thunder?s. ?A horse
like her.?

She was a blood bay with a bright eye and a long fiery mane. Lady
Rohanne took a carrot from her sleeves and stroked her head as she took
it. ?The carrot, not the fingers,? she told the horse, before she turned
again to Dunk. ?I call her Flame, but you may name her as you please.
Call her Amends, if you like.?

For a moment he was speechless. He leaned on the crutch and looked at
the blood bay with new eyes. She was magnificent. A better mount than
any the old man had ever owned. You had only to look at those long,
clean limbs to see how swift she?d be.

?I bred her for beauty, and for speed.?

He turned back to Thunder. ?I cannot take her.?

?Why not??

?She is too good a horse for me. Just look at her.?

A flush crept up Rohanne?s face. She clutched her braid, twisting it
between her fingers. ?I had to marry, you know that. My father?s will .
. . oh, don?t be such a fool.?

?What else should I be? I?m thick as a castle wall and bastard born as
well.?

?Take the horse. I refuse to let you go without something to remember me
by.?

?I will remember you, m?lady. Have no fear of that.?

/?Take her!?/

Dunk grabbed her braid and pulled her face to his. It was awkward with
the crutch and the difference in their heights. He almost fell before he
got his lips on hers. He kissed her hard. One of her hands went around
his neck, and one around his back. He learned more about kissing in a
moment than he had ever known from watching. But when they finally broke
apart, he drew his dagger. ?I know what I want to remember you by, m?lady.?

Egg was waiting for him at the gatehouse, mounted on a handsome new
sorrel palfrey and holding Maester?s lead. When Dunk trotted up to them
on Thunder, the boy looked surprised. ?She said she wanted to give you a
new horse, ser.?

?Even highborn ladies don?t get all they want,? Dunk said, as they rode
out across the drawbridge. ?It wasn?t a horse I wanted.? The moat was so
high it was threatening to overflow its banks. ?I took something else to
remember her by instead. A lock of that red hair.? He reached under his
cloak, brought out the braid, and smiled.

 

In the iron cage at the crossroads, the corpses still embraced. They
looked lonely, forlorn. Even the flies had abandoned them, and the crows
as well. Only some scraps of skin and hair remained upon the dead men?s
bones.

Dunk halted, frowning. His ankle was hurting from the ride, but it made
no matter. Pain was as much a part of knighthood as were swords and
shields. ?Which way is south?? he asked Egg. It was hard to know, when
the world was all rain and mud and the sky was gray as a granite wall.

?That?s south, ser.? Egg pointed. ?That?s north.?

?Summerhall is south. Your father.?

?The Wall is north.?

Dunk looked at him. ?That?s a long way to ride.?

?I have a new horse, ser.?

?So you do.? Dunk had to smile. ?And why would you want to see the Wall??

?Well,? said Egg. ?I hear it?s tall.?

