This chapter was edited by Gladiusx.
Fist of the First Men
Lord Commander Jeor Mormont
"Hold the line! Hold the fucking line, damn you!" Jeor grabbed Fornio as he stumbled out of the line and shoved him back with a new torch in hand. "Don't use your swords, you fools! Burn them, burn them all!"
His men roared in defiance as they brandished their torches and obsidian weapons at the enemy. Wights burned as if they were soaked in oil, and Tumberjon kicked a burning corpse down the hill, setting its fellows on fire. Simply stabbing them with obsidian was not enough, but it helped keep them in place long enough for a brother to set them on fire.
Whatever foul magic caused the dead to rise and walk seemed to conflict with the dragonglass, rendering any wight stabbed with them inert. However, when the men withdrew the obsidian, the wights would stand back up and continue shambling towards them.
Cutting them to pieces was even worse, as they would have to stab each separate piece and burn it.
If only they had more than
two Valyrian Steel weapons.
Whatever magick the Valyrians had imbued in their blades permanently severed the connection of the Others with their wights, unlike obsidian. A single slice or stab was enough to drop the wights like mummer's dolls with their strings cut. The men would quickly set them on fire in case the Cold Shadows reformed the connection.
Jeor glanced at his steward as he performed a deadly dance with the gifted Longclaw, sending limbs and heads flying everywhere. Jon Snow kept an entire flank of the monsters at bay, showing his fortitude. Jeor had given him twenty men to command, and Snow silenced any grumbling from the older rangers by proving his mettle and skill with the sword.
At seven and ten, Jon Snow had a good head on his shoulder, sharp wits to go with it, and a very stable sword hand. Ser Rodrik Cassel, Winterfell's master-at-arms, had proven his skill in teaching once more, building a good foundation in yet another pupil. Just like his uncle, Benjen Stark, Jon Snow was a diamond in the rough, an able warrior who only lacked experience, and if he lived long enough to gain it, he would be nigh unstoppable.
Or that was what Jeor had thought until things changed drastically over a moon prior.
Every morning, since that fated day, there was a newfound confidence in Jon Snow, both in his actions and stride. The Lord Commander observed how, with every new dawn, the boy practiced harder, and that awkwardness that clung to youth quickly melted away like summer snow under the sun. It reminded Jeor Mormont of how a fresh squire or son acted after their first battle. However, it was as if Jon Snow was fighting a bloody war every time he went to sleep, and he woke up a bloodied and more experienced veteran the next day.
All that experience that the young Snow lacked was appearing faster than Jeor could comprehend. Watching Stark's natural-born son dispose of the shambling corpses with well-practiced finesse and experience was a sobering experience. Each strike was precise, sharp yet fluid, and judging by the ease with which Longclaw bit into bone, bronze, and fur -
strong. As an old man with his prime long gone, Jeor could admit, he would not be the boy's match even at his peak.
In fact, the only two in the Night's Watch that could hold against the current Jon Snow would be Qhorin Halfhand and Benjen Stark if he were found alive. And gods save him, Jeor would place all his coin on Snow in another sennight if he continued his current rate of growth.
His choice for steward was beginning to pay even more dividends because it was one thing for the men to follow some highlord's bastard and yet another thing entirely to follow another legend in the making. Any doubt in Jeor's mind about the boy's mother evaporated. This could only be that legendary Dayne talent mixing with the blood of the Kings of Winter.
And gods, the rumors of Eddard Stark raising him as a spare were indeed proven true. Tactics, command, leadership, knowledge, heraldry, history–Jon Snow was trained in it all.
Jeor could still remember their talk on that fated day a moon ago.
They had just left Craster's keep and were a sennight away from the wretch's home when they camped for the night near a spring. Jeor was speaking to his commanders in his tent when a disturbed Jon approached them.
The lad insisted he speak to him privately, but Thoren Smallwood had bristled at the impudence. The look in Jon Snow's haunted eyes and his direwolf's massive, looming form as it poked its head inside the tent convinced Jeor to give him a chance. There was something uncanny about the Weirwood colors of the Direwolf. Touched by the gods, some of the older rangers claimed when they saw Ghost the first time.
Jeor bid Jon enter, where the lad spoke to them about impossible things.
Lord Commander Brynden Bloodraven being alive; a greenseer who can see through the weirwoods the past and present, the return of the Others, Craster colluding with them… so many mad things that Jeor had immediately refused to believe. Jarman Buckwell even rebuked the young Snow for wasting their time with children's tales while Thoren's face increasingly turned red, muttering about heathen devilry as the young Snow spoke.
Then, Jon declared he had proof and brought them outside to show them. Despite Jeor's hesitance, Mallador Locke, who had remained silent throughout, followed the lad, causing Jeor and the others to hurry after them. At the edge of the camp, they found flocks of ravens on the trees, Jeor's own large raven screeching
SNOW and flying to join them.
The bushes moved, showing figures with short statures and bright eyes. Jeor was a Northman and had been a member of the Night's Watch for many years. He had his fair share of dealings with wildlings and their foul magics. Skinchangers and wargs were rare but not unheard of, along with whatever charlatans pretending to be woods witches existed in these parts. However, that was the extent of the so-called magic that the lands beyond the Wall offered.
And yet, even he could not deny the existence of the Children of the Forest when they stared at him from the bushes.
Thoren Smallwood had unsheathed his blade and nearly ran one of them through if not for Locke grabbing his hand. The Riverlander had wide, bloodshot eyes and was frothing in the mouth about devils, but a command from Jeor had him stand down.
Only one of the Children could speak the common tongue; Leaf was her name. "We are Those-Who-Sing-The-Song-Of-The-Earth," she introduced them, the Children being a name they loathed for some reason, but Jon called them Earth Singers for short. Jeor felt like he was in a dream as all the fables of the North came alive in front of him.
Leaf, the Earth Singer, claimed the Last Greenseer, Brynden Rivers, was on their side and would be helping them through Jon Snow. Jeor did not know why it had to be Jon Snow in particular, but Jon confessed to him later that Bloodraven was not keen on approaching the Watch. It was only due to Jon's stubborn insistence that he acquiesced and sent the Earth Singers along with something else.
As a sign of goodwill, they gifted him a Valyrian Steel sword.
"Wait, this looks like the description of Dark fucking Sister," Jarman Buckwell gasped in shock as he picked up the sword.
Any doubts about the authenticity of the claims were washed away then, for everyone knew the blade was with Bloodraven during his final, ill-fated ranging.
Bloodraven even spoke to them through one of the ravens. Poor Thoren nearly got a stroke from the shock and had to lay down. The ancient ranger provided them important information about what was happening in these savage lands.
The Others were stirring once more. They were never gone, merely hidden to the far north and west beyond the Frostfangs, in lands neither the Watch nor anyone had ever charted. Jeor did not disbelieve him, for he had seen the corpses of Jaffer Flowers and Othor rise from the dead. His commanders were skeptical, but the existence of the Children rendered any of their suspicions moot.
"I spent decades trying to gleam into the Cold Ones," the murder of ravens crowed out in a small chorus. "Past, present, future. But to my greatest surprise, the Others were not one folk or group. It reminded me of wildlings, coming and going in tribes and clans, with their customs and languages."
And what united them? Apparently, their hatred of
warmbloods. Humans. In simple terms, they were like the Essosi scum to the East. They desired more slaves to do their bidding, and they did so either by raising the dead or by creating Ice Dolls with the use of human babies.
Jeor now knew what Craster did with his sons, and he had half a mind to turn back to gut the heathen scum on a Weirwood.
"What changed, then?" The Lord Commander asked grimly. "Why would they unite now, after so many millennia?"
"I know no more than you do," came the bleak response. "But does it matter?"
It didn't matter, of course. The Others were driving the wildlings towards the Wall out of desperation, and they were hunting the rangers. Whatever the cause, it was an act of war.
"And how can we defeat those foul fiends?" Ser Mallador Locke, a senior ranger and commander of the scouts, asked impetuously. "Surely, there is a way?"
"There is," Leaf's voice was laced with sorrow, but then again, her speech sounded sad. "Wights take to fire like kindling, but it scarcely does anything to the Cold Ones. Obsidian or dragonsteel would shatter the frost dolls hewn from human babes. It's those hidden ones that are the most troublesome. They could control their dolls and dead thralls from afar."
"It's not going to be an easy fight," Brynden warned. "Or a short one. But you already suspected that. No, your immediate trouble will come from Mance Rayder and his army camped near the Frostfangs, west of the First of the First Men. The fool's searching for a magical horn that he believes could bring down the Wall. Pah, lackwits, and imbeciles, as if Brandon's Wall could be brought down by some pesky runic horn!"
The blatant derision in the raven's crowing had gotten a few chuckles from the rangers.
The corvids continued with their gargled cawing, "Of course, there are other, not-so-urgent matters. Magic seems to have awoken fully, and some things have changed."
Dread welled up in Jeor's chest. Magic was feared, and for good reason. But he asked anyway, "What things?"
"Dunno. I can feel the change, but how in the seven bloody hells would I know all of it? Some things that I never thought possible now easily happen. You might feel different or awaken some obscure talent or ability previously dormant in your lineage. Perhaps something entirely different. Or, well, you wouldn't notice a thing."
Jon Snow had stubbornly looked away as he patted his white direwolf, who happily wagged his shaggy tail like an obedient dog.
There was more information that Jeor found useful. Qhorin had left the Shadow Tower with one hundred men and was following the Milkwater's west bank towards the Fist. Bloodraven warns that if he continues on this path, he might stumble on Mance Rayder's wildling army. Jeor trusted Qhorin to have scouts on the field to avoid such a situation, yet he still decided to send Thoren and a score of men to better coordinate with the men from the Shadow Tower.
Finally, there were the whereabouts of his First Ranger. Bloodraven had watched from the Weirwoods as Benjen Stark fought valiantly against a group of the Ice Thralls but was ultimately captured. His whereabouts were still unknown, but it was worrying that the Others would want him alive. Regardless, they had learned valuable information from that confrontation.
Regular steel did nothing against the foe, but fisticuffs still worked - if you could overpower the mythical strength of the monsters and withstand their cold.
From there, the Earth Singers split into two groups. One of them, led by Leaf, would head north and west, beyond the Frostfangs, as they search for the base of the Others, where they believe they have Benjen Stark in captivity. Apparently, one of them was a skinchanger with an owl companion, making them excellent scouts, and they agreed that they would shadow Thoren's group as they meet with Qhorin and help them scout the wildlings.
His commander of the rangers was far too tired to object to it, thankfully.
A dozen of them remained, promising to act as forward scouts and supply them with obsidian. The Singers had pointed the Watchmen to vast deposits and caches that could be found… all over the place, really. Bloodraven also promised to translate for them through his ravens, although Jon Snow asked to be taught their tongue.
"No human had ever managed to fully learn it before. Even Brynden still has difficulty speaking it." Leaf had warned, "But I suppose it doesn't hurt to try."
And Jeor decided to keep his steward close.
Especially when it became clear the young man was a warg. Jeor had always suspected it with his uncanny control of Ghost, but his suspicions were confirmed when he saw him communing with ravens and reporting what they found. He did not care; considering their foes, a bit of magic on their side would not hurt.
Besides, it was not some wildling or a no-named peasant but the son of
Ned Stark, a man who lived and breathed honor and duty. If any man could overcome whatever stigma or curse that came with using magic, it would be a Son of Winterfell.
Snow or not, it did not matter; the lad was raised there, and the blood of the Kings of Winter flowed thickly in his veins.
Jeor had, of course, ordered his commanders and the rest to keep mum about the Singers lest the men do something stupid. But word about the Others would be spread out, so the rangers were not unprepared when the black brothers faced them in battle.
The men were, predictably, distraught with the news about the Others. Many, led by Ottyn Wythers, had argued it would be best to return to the Wall now that they knew about the wildling army. If the Wall was impregnable, why should they risk their lives on the field?
"What happens if the coming winter proves cold enough to freeze the Bay of Ice or the Bay of Seals?" Jeor asked then. "It happened thirty years ago and twice more half a century prior."
That had silenced most complaints. The men grumbled, but that was something they always did.
"Besides, we still need to deal with the wildlings sooner or later," the Locke knight added. "What if the savage fucks decide to ally with the bloody Others like Craster?"
The rest of the commanders and senior rangers all agreed. And so, Jeor led the ranging towards the Fist. Ser Mallador was ordered to keep an eye on the troops in case the dissent spilled out of hand. Without his First Ranger, that duty would need to fall on a trusted ranger, and Mallador Locke was a Northman, a knight, and most importantly, one of the scant few who had taken the Black out of duty, not to avoid punishment.
Over the days and weeks, they trekked through the Haunted Forest, finding it to be eerily empty of any wildling. It was full of wild game, however, for the lack of human predators had allowed plenty of deer, elks, moose, boars, and other such animals to propagate.
The same could be said for the predators.
Jon Snow's direwolf prowled ahead daily, and returned with companions. It started slowly with a second direwolf, a she-wolf to be precise, then a couple of wolves, then more and more. Soon, Jeor suspected nearly a hundred bloody
direwolves were just out of sight of the rangers. This was nearly five times the size of the biggest pack he had encountered prior - and that was regular wolves. Not even Jon Snow knew how many there were, as he claimed they followed Ghost. Even more grumblings sounded, particularly from the southerners and adherents of the Seven. The men had to waste time calming the horses while throwing dirty looks at his steward.
But one did not simply make problems for a man with a hundred direwolves at his beck and call. Jeor had seen a few shaggy beasts approach him late at night, rubbing playfully at the Stark bastard. Even two or three younger pups were always loitering around the young Snow.
It did not help that Jon Snow was in constant communication with Bloodraven. Jeor might have believed the ancient ranger's words but did not trust the old bastard himself. Who would not have his wits scrambled after living to such an old age?! Spending so many decades alone with nothing to do but spy on the realm… it would surely ruin the mind. He hoped young Jon would not take a similar path with how he used those ravens.
On the bright side, the hounds they brought were foisted on the young man to care for. What did it matter if he had a dozen more canines? Strangely, Chett, the kennel attendant, seemed upset about relinquishing control over the hounds and joining the front. Jeor recalled the leechman's son was an aid to Maester Aemon but was replaced by the literate Samwell Tarly.
Any of the men's worries and skepticism were squashed when they came upon the first group of shambling corpses. Jon's wolves sniffed them from miles away, and he, along with Jarman Buckwell, the second-best sword in the ranging after the young bastard, now wielding Dark Sister, led twenty men with obsidian and torches to clear them out. They lost no one, but they did not find the masters, only the thralls. There was no doubt it was a scouting party, and knowing the magic of the Others, they knew where they were.
At least the men grumbled less as they increased their pace to the Fist.
Jeor shook his head as he continued walking up and down the line, leaving Snow's position and barking orders at the men to hold their ground. Their foes did not tire nor retreat. They did not suffer from the cold, nor did they hunger. They surrounded them from all sides except the west, where the Milkwater acted as a moat for the fort, and the north, where the incline was too sharp for even the dead to attack from. The wights were slow and clumsy yet incredibly strong once they got a hold of you, as they discovered the hard way when one of the brothers was torn to pieces by a few of them.
Yet, as long as they knew their weaknesses, they were incredibly easy to defeat. Jeor worried more about their masters. His army had arrived at the Fist of the First Men two days ago, and the Singers reported Qhorin was still a few days away but had found the Wildling's camp, which meant his arrival could be delayed. The Halfhand would want to scout things properly, as he always did. Not that Jeor minded; knowing the position of your foes was essential in battle.
They had barely rested and started building fortifications when the Others struck late at night. Thankfully, Jon had warned them an hour ahead, and they had enough time to prepare torches and fashion whatever obsidian they found into weapons. They had been fighting for many hours now, yet the lack of sunlight hid the true numbers of the enemy.
Suddenly, a sudden cold snap tickled his spine, and Jeor turned towards where a screeching sound was heard. It was not a sound he had ever heard. It caused inexplicable fear to crawl up his back. The sound was like steel grinding on glass. The men were wavering, looking around wildly at where the sound came from, but he quickly asserted his presence.
"Focus on the dead! Forget the noise, burn those wretches, damn you!"
His commanders repeated his orders, though some needed more than a rap on the head to keep them fighting. On the southern part of the fort, a cowardly brother dropped his torch and pushed one of his fellow brothers at the advancing wights in an attempt to run towards the horses.
Before anyone could react, Mallador Locke stabbed the traitor from behind before beheading him. The Northern knight scowled as he dragged the corpse to one of the dismantlers to strip it of valuable clothes and armor before setting it on fire - then he turned to the rest of his troops, "You will fight, or you will fucking die. Better die doing your duty than be an oath-breaking scum!"
The men did not have time to think of retreating before the Wights increased their onslaught. But the clanging sound continued, followed by inhuman screeching. Jeor gathered his trusted reserves and hurried to the eastern side of the fort, where Jon Snow was stationed.
One man hurried to him as he approached, "Lord Commander! It's them, they're here!"
He did not need to guess who
They were. Everyone was armed with dragonglass daggers and studded clubs, while Jarman Buckwell adjusted his grip on Dark Sister. They hurried to the eastern walls, finding many wounded and a couple of naked corpses set on fire, their garments set aside to be reused.
Jon Snow fiercely dueled
three of the Cold Shadows, his blade a whirlwind of steel as he slashed, parried, deflected, stabbed, and fought like a bloody demon that belayed his young age of seven and ten. The clanging and screeching sound came from the Valyrian Steel clashing with the Other's Blade. His wolf pack had torn apart a giant spider and was in the process of tearing another, but many animal wights were attacking as well, yet the men peppered them with fire arrows.
The Others… were certainly a sight to behold, but now that he was forewarned by Bloodraven, he could tell that they were…
lesser. Some imperfections like those he would find on the seams of a cheap cloak. Despite their ethereal beauty and the grace of their movements, they were too much like statues to believe them real.
They were Ice Dolls. Formerly human babes that were corrupted by whatever monstrous magic their masters used to become thralls. They lacked the skill to wield their blades as they threw wild swings at Jon Snow, which he expertly avoided, but they certainly did not lack strength, judging by the lad's grimace every time his blade met frost.
It only took Jeor a few heartbeats to inspect the scene before coming to a decision.
"Men, advance!"
.
.
.
For once, the sun shone brightly in this cold land, and Jeor could feel the exhaustion of his age. They had been fighting without respite for hours all through the night. More of the Ice Dolls appeared after slaying the three fighting Jon Snow, but dragonsteel and dragonglass, combined with valor and skill at arms, had beaten them back.
Their greatest adversaries were two dead giants and a mammoth. The mammoth was brought down by the direwolves while the giants struggled to climb up the hill, allowing them enough time to gather as many archers as possible and rain fire on them. Their furry hide set them ablaze.
By dawn, hardly any of the foes remained, and by sunrise, the scant few remaining had completely retreated. The men rejoiced, and Jeor allowed many to sleep while those awake to have a hearty breakfast, while he conversed with the Greenseer and the Singers. The conspicuous absence of the hidden masters of the Icy Constructs frustrated Bloodraven. The Others had once again proven elusive, somehow capable of hiding from his senses, though perhaps their magic was simply so strong that they could control their thralls from vast distances.
The smell of charred corpses still permeated the air as Brown Bernarr tended to his bleeding temple.
"It's just a scratch, Lord Commander. Normally, a poultice and clean bandages should have it healed within a sennight, but I'm not sure what manner of sorcery was in those blades."
"That will be all, Bernarr." He sent the squat ranger away with a wave of his hand and nodded to the tired Mallador Locke as he joined their campfire. "How many did we lose, Ser Mallador?"
"13 men dead and 19 wounded, all but two would recover after a few days rest. We must have slayed over a thousand wights and a dozen Others."
A low cheer sounded around the campfire, where most men were having breakfast or being treated for wounds. The casualties could have been far worse if not for Bloodraven's warnings. The wights were difficult to count because many burned to ashes, and more were animals instead of men.
"Seven fucking hells, those bastards used anything and everything to throw at us, even the bloody rabbits! Yet we still beat those bunnies!"
Another cheer resounded at one of the younger brothers' words, Pypar, he thought was his name. Jeor should work on remembering the names of his recruits.
"Jon the
Slayer! Fucker slew three of those icy fucks. I swear on me mum, I saw it with me own eyes!" One of the younger brothers, Grenn, clapped Jon Snow's shoulder, causing the young man to grimace heavily; he had suffered a wound on his upper arm from the same blade that wounded Jeor.
Sam the Craven cautiously approached, and it seemed the fat lad had earned his moniker.
"How did you do it, Jon? I-I was so terrified, and I was tending to the ravens!"
"Let's hope you didn't eat any of them out of stress, Fat Sam."
"I-I did not!"
"Why so defensive, then? Ah, never mind. So, Jon," Pyper coughed as Snow kicked his legs, "We knew you were a fancy lord's son, but I swear I've never seen anyone swing a sword so damn fast in my life."
Everyone stared at the young Snow in a mix of curiosity and respect. Jeor also looked on from across the campfire. He had fought alongside the young man and saw him holding his own and ultimately defeating those three monsters when his best men floundered against them.
It was now clear that Jon Snow had awoken something, something other than skinchanging or the like. And Jeor felt pained to imagine how this ranging would have ended if they had gone in blind without the knowledge provided by his young steward. Or without his increasingly lethal sword skill.
"I just…trusted in my training," Jon Snow lowered his head. The boy was too humble for his own good; many others in his shoes would be boasting for the world to hear until their throat went sore. "The cold didn't bother me much. All I felt was my heart beating like a drum and my blood singing for battle."
He then rubbed his right hand over that icy bracer he wore on his left - his eyes glazed over and a queer smile blooming on his face. "It was like…like I
needed to show those things not to underestimate me. I needed to
kill them, no, to
assert my power and dominance…"
A strange silence fell over them before Pypar alleviated it with more jests. Jeor glanced at his commanders, Ser Jarman and Ser Mallador, who shrugged. Ser Jarman had also slayed one of the Cold Shadows after a brutal duel while the rest were driven back by a hail of obsidian-tipped arrows.
Ned Stark must have trained his son very well indeed. Snow's wounded arm was bare, as if the cold did not bother him, and the linen wrapped around the cut had dried blood as if the wound was already closed. Strangely, he seemed to be recovering fine. Jon Snow had recovered a bracer from that icy material the Other wore. Any who touched it was burned by the cold, yet Snow felt nothing and wore it on his left arm.
Starks were built different, he supposed.
After the tiring night, nobody questioned Jon Snow anymore. Even now, Jeor could see he had won the grudging respect of all rangers, new, old, veteran, from the North or the South.
"Any word on Qhorin?"
The question was directed to Jon Snow, who was inspecting a sack of some sort that his snowy direwolf dug up. He stared into space for a heartbeat. "He's an hour away with Thoren Smallwood. They seem to have taken some wildlings captive."
He nodded, even as he ignored the queer looks thrown by his men at Snow. He might have proven himself formidable in battle, yet it was still hard to let go of the fears the men grew up with. Wargs, skinchangers, sorcerers…what was the world coming to when that was becoming normal?
Snow returned to the sack in hand, where he uncovered more dragonglass, which he quickly distributed. Before Jeor could grow more curious, Ser Locke signaled for him to speak in private. The Lord Commander tiredly stood and joined him a short-distance away where the man's squire, Donnel Hill, was waiting.
"Well, Mallador? What is it?"
"The traitor who tried to desert, and I beheaded. He was our former houndsman."
"What about him?"
"I had Donnel
befriend him and keep an eye for any mischief. Donnel?"
"Aye, Chett had planned to have you and many of the higher-ranked brothers killed, Milord." Donnel Hill had an uneasy smile as he reported. "Tried to recruit many of us in some mad scheme to have Ottyn Wythers be commander, whom they hoped would then return to the Wall."
Jeor wanted to groan; mutiny so deep into the cold wilderness? Madness!
He once again lamented his order's lack of proper men of honor. There were enough in the higher ranks, but the common foot soldiers were scum who chose the Black over the noose.
He turned to the nervous squire only for his master to speak on his behalf, "Donnel agreed to join in the plot under my orders. We needed to root out such corruption among the ranks, and this was the best method."
Leave it to the most Southerly placed House in the North to have enough cunning to plan for such a ruse. Jeor was not made for such games; give him an ax in hand and a target, and he would gladly split an enemy's head. "Aye, if you vouch for him. But the coward is dead, so why bother with this now?"
"Chett was but the ringleader. There were other conspirators, milord." Donnel Hill glanced around warily as if worried they would be overheard. "They planned to kill Tarly to prevent ravens from making it to the Wall. I know they tried to recruit Small Paul, but he stuck close to Snow after receiving a raven chick as a pet from the warg."
Jeor rubbed his brow as Donnel reported on all the conspirators who would most likely follow through with the plot, even with their ringleader dead.
"Any of the conspirators die in the fighting?"
"Aside from Chett? Sadly, no." Locke answered him before glancing to the south. "I can see Qhorin's group."
Jeor turned to where over a hundred men and their animals stopped by the edge of the forest, most likely gawking at the burning corpses. They still needed to trek up the hill to their camp, so they got some time.
"Keep an eye on those men. The moment they so much as whisper any treason, you let us know."
Donnel nodded and left, while Mallador gazed at him. "You intend to pick them out one by one?"
"Aye, I can't afford morale to drop now, not after a victory and with Qhorin's group arriving. Better to have them get into accidents or sent on suicide missions."
The knight nodded, and they left to rouse the men and gather by the fort's entrance, where Qhorin arrived. Greetings were made, prisoners were placed in stockades, and the rest of the men were assigned bunks in the ring fort. The wildlings would naturally be put to work rebuilding the fort, but that could wait.
Meanwhile, Jeor and his commanders discussed their next step in his tent. Qhorin gazed strangely at Jon Snow's presence but shrugged it off.
"Eighty thousand?!"
"Aye, give or take five thousand, I say, though there were many more in the hills or on patrols. And that's aside from the giants. As many as two thousand we managed to count before the fuckers started scouting with their animals. We would have been caught if not for the Earth Singers," Thoren grumbled, but Qhorin's voice was full of awe as he spoke of the Earth Singers and, dare he say, worship. "Even the Thenns were there, and they were all digging for something."
"That's good. They can keep digging and waste their supplies all they want. The Frostfangs are as inhospitable as they come."
"Aye, I can't see them staying for another moon or two before they either find what they're looking for or decide to move on or risk starving." Qhorin stared at a rough map they made of the region. "So what's the plan, Jeor?"
"You already know about the Others and Bloodraven's message?"
Qhorin glanced at Jon again, specifically his icy bracer, before nodding, "Aye, Smallwood talked my ear off about heathen sorcery and devilry." His commander of the Rangers scowled but wisely remained silent. "Leaf also explained her side of the tale before she moved on with her own mission." Again, his voice was full of respect compared to his fellow brother. "I've also seen the corpses outside. Spiders the size of horses, the lad's bracer, and the queer chill in the air. Aye, I believe it even more after seeing all of that with my eyes."
"Good, then we shall not waste time." Jeor turned to Jon, who stood even straighter at his gaze before turning to his remaining commanders. "This is an opportunity. The savages might be humans like us and are escaping from the Others. However, we cannot allow them to pass through the Wall, no matter what. At least not on their terms, and only with the grace of the Lord of Winterfell."
Jeor's gaze lingered on every one of his commanders, and they all mirrored his resolve. Others or not, the Wildlings were still uncivilized savages, and allowing them past the Wall in large numbers would be a catastrophe. While Jeor, the Lord of Bear Island, could have thought differently about the matter, he did not have the authority to negotiate with Mance Rayder aside from his position of Lord Commander of the Night's Watch. Only the King or the Warden of the North could have the authority for such negotiations.
Besides, what was a deserting oathbreaker's word worth?
The Night's Watch would also be unable to fight them on the open field. Even the best equipped and trained brother would fall against such numbers, even if less than half of the Wildlings could fight. No, the path for them was clear. Delay them as much as possible while preparing the Wall for a siege. Send word to Winterfell and the Northern Houses for men. Keep the Wildlings on the west bank of the Milkwater, destroy all possible crossings, and force them to attack the Bridge of Skulls.
Hopefully, the North would have enough men to provide them with aid. The only true problem here were the Others, but he could do nothing about them. Bloodraven promised to monitor them as best he could but warned that his powers were
not infallible.
Jeor glanced again at Jon Snow; the lad would be crucial for his plan. "Here's what we will do…"
A*H*M
The Sea God
Poseidon sat at a table on a beautiful beach as he gazed at the calm sea beyond. It was a picturesque expanse of white sand that sparkled like crushed pearls. The gentle lapping of the waves against the shore was a rhythmic lullaby, unlike the turbulent waters in his son's mind.
Heh, since when did he become so poetic? The last time he had tried poetry was when he was courting Amphitrite. Ah, those were some interesting times. He chuckled as he recalled his failure to woo the beautiful Nereid and then sulked in his empty palace like a child whose parents refused to give him a treat. Then, Delphin pulled him from his slump, gave him dating advice, and Poseidon successfully wooed Amphitrite. He was glad his son would not need to go through such drama to get married.
"But, My Lord. Such drama is what makes life worthwhile, is it not?"
Poseidon turned to his companion as she stirred a dollop of honey in her teacup. "Listening in again, my dear? Do you not know it is rude to eavesdrop on one's thoughts?"
"I beg your forgiveness, but I could not help myself." The woman smiled innocently, yet there was no shred of remorse in her apology. "It's not every day I get to speak to a sentient god. One who had walked the Earth and sired kings upon humans."
"Even if I am but a fragment of such a being and foreign to boot?"
"Especially so!" The Maiden, still taking the form of that lass Calypso, sipped her tea and hummed appreciatively, licking her full lips suggestively. "I would not dare to meet and speak to such an august presence if he was at full power. Why, I might accidentally provoke you, and judging from your
youthful encounters, we would most likely be having a much different conversation."
"…I was young and foolish." A purring sound grabbed Poseidon's attention to the golden cat sleeping on the chair beside him - he smiled sadly as he patted her head. "There is no need to fear me."
"Mayhaps so, yet forewarned is forearmed." The Maiden shrugged, allowing her brown tresses to shake along with a few other things - Poseidon groaned inwardly at such a childish attempt at seduction, she truly was more innocent than she pretended to be. "Regardless, how may I serve, My Lord?"
"You were the one who brought me here."
"Indeed, yet you and your son caused quite the commotion after connecting with the Weirwoods. My, so audacious! Claiming every Weirwood in the region for yourself?" The woman hid a titter behind her long sleeves. "Makes me wonder what you are planning with it."
"Now, I only claimed what was already abandoned, and we're not planning anything malevolent here. Or at least, nothing that the overseers of the network, or as you call them, the
Old Gods, would not approve of. Besides, they were the ones who invited us for a meet and greet, so to speak."
Poseidon shivered involuntarily as he recalled the truly eldritch monstrosities that were the overseers - protecting Percy's mind from them had taken a great toll on him. Gods… no, they were something completely different from gods. Thankfully, they were…well, not benign, but truly neutral and fair in their dealings.
"They did accept us into their pantheon, so to speak. It helps that the Merlin King's position had been vacant ever since he had been betrayed by his lieutenant who in turn was banished to the west."
"Ah, such unpleasantness. I was but a newborn at the time. Or, newly released from the network."
Poseidon hummed noncommittally as he stroked the cat's mane. According to the Maiden, the Weirwood Network, as it was called in these lands, housed all the souls of the deceased from around the world, but they were not limited to weirwoods alone. The trees connected any mortal who died in Westeros to the network, where they could be…properly registered, for lack of a better term, in the hive mind that was the network.
Nevertheless, once in the Network, the soul would become an echo as it entered a period of hibernation, occasionally awakening when a Greenseer, traditionally a power exclusive to the dryads known as the Earth Singers but had become more common among humans, attempted to commune with them. In time, they would fully awaken and strive for a chance to reincarnate. There was also a system of judgement in place here; good deeds shall earn you a better chance to incarnate into a good life and guarantee a peaceful slumber. Bad deeds could have a former prince incarnate into a dung farmer, all the while suffering for potentially an eternity.
On very rare occasions, a powerful soul who had done great deeds in life and was still remembered could be released from the network as a god.
The Seven were such people, though the mortals, as usual, had vastly misunderstood their origin. An unbidden chuckle came to him as he recalled some of the ways the mortals attributed him as a Chthonic God back in the day when he merely acted as a guide for souls lost at sea. Poseidon had a lot of fun ribbing Hades on that.
Still, those gods were far more limited than him in what they could do and how they could affect the world. As the Maiden said, Poseidon was a novelty in that he was capable of walking the Earth and directly influencing the fates of men.
At least that was the case until his son's arrival and accidentally giving the network the equivalent of a steroid shot causing the world's magic to go into overdrive. The gods suddenly had more access to the mortal realm and could influence humans and other creatures more directly.
They still could not walk the Earth, however. Not yet, at least.
"She's growing, nearly the size of a lion cub, now." The Maiden nodded towards Myrcella on the chair beside him.
"Indeed, she is." He still did not know why the girl constantly appeared to him in dreams, most likely a prank by one of the overseers, but he did not mind; he had always been a cat person from when his mother would let him play with her pet lions. "Now, we have yet to discuss what you aim to gain from attaching yourself to my son's soon-to-be wife."
"Oh, come now, I am the goddess of maidens. Of course, I would be interested in the girl. Did you not have a similar goddess back home?"
"That one made sure all maidens remained just that - Maidens." He deadpanned at her, enjoying the woman's grimace, yet she still pursed her lips, causing him to sigh and gaze at her seriously. "Fine, keep your secrets, but take this piece of advice from a more experienced deity. Do not play with the fate of mortals. There lies the stuff of madness."
"Oh, don't worry–"
"
Especially," Poseidon continued, adding a steely edge to his tone. "Mortals that are demigods and have their godly parent actively watching over them."
He did not need to spell out the threat, and the Maiden nodded seriously. "Fret not. I care deeply about her and all maidens. Considering her love and care for Percy, I shall naturally not cause any trouble with him."
Poseidon nodded and continued stroking the cat, finding solace in the soothing act as he contemplated the dark future ahead of him and Percy.
He had met with many of Westeros's scattered and mind-addled deities in the Weirwoods. Hardly any of them were coherent, and the ones who were tended to be reclusive, like those nature gods that the dryads worshiped. Their scatterbrained methods had unintentionally caused the dryads to enter into a decline, and Poseidon did not like it. He had hoped to poach those dryads to care for the Weirwoods he would be claiming.
No matter how long he stayed in this world or how strong he could potentially grow, he would
never achieve the same amount of power he had back home - this world was simply too different. He needed lieutenants, priests, and other minions to help him solidify his power. Percy would naturally be his champion, but Poseidon did not want to burden his son even more than necessary. Let the lad enjoy his married life and have plenty of kids.
Back to the gods, some were genial enough, such as that half-naked man in wolf furs with the hammer who thanked him for watching over the Stark girl. Poseidon strongly believed that the man must have been a Stark in life. Ironic that he would be worshiped as a
New God, considering his family's history.
But no, none mattered compared to the hostile and violent deities, and there were several.
The Storm God, previously the God of the Narrow Sea, who managed to usurp the skies and the aspect of the Warrior. The ornery god was foaming at the mouth and would have fought them right then and there during that divine
banquet the overseers invited them to.
If not for
Guest Rights.
Just thinking about the overseers declaring those two words made him shiver. There was truly only one thing the Old Gods cared about: absolute fairness and keeping your oaths. Guest Rights were but the tip of the iceberg of it. As for fairness…well, the overseers had their own interpretation of it.
"Usurper! You dare show your face?" The Storm God had been furious when his avatar found them in the network.
"Hey now, you're the fella who threw a tantrum when I woke up in that shithole." Percy gave the god that cocky grin that Sally always claimed he got from him - Poseidon resented that; his grin was suave, with nothing cocky about it. "I thought that storm you threw was your doing, but eh, you kinda missed us…by a hundred miles or so."
"Damn you, my champion shall–"
"Come on, man! Why the need to make that weird echo to your voice? I can hear you just fine here." Percy poked his pinky into his ear for emphasis. "Besides, you're calling
me Usurper? Weren't you the one who took over that Storm dude's job?"
"He was weak! While I am–"
"Yeah, yeah, you're strong, you got thousands of supplicants, you've beaten countless enemies, probably have some monstrous pet in your backyard, yaddi yaddi yadda, heard it all a thousand times." His son ran his hand over his messy hair before glaring at the cloud-clad god, forced by the laws of the overseers to keep to the size of a human - yet he still towered over them both at ten feet. "I have lost count of how many overconfident fools I had to take down a peg or two for such nonsense. You want a fight? I'll give you one."
Suffice it to say, Poseidon did not doubt that his son would face a lot of strife with that stormy god. The rest of the awakened gods in the Network had witnessed the face-off, and no self-respecting god would accept such insults, especially from an
upstart mortal.
Poseidon had never felt more proud of his son. Troublemaker that he was, he still lived and breathed the aspect of the
Sea. They hated to be constrained, and not even another sea deity could dare threaten them.
Yet, the Storm God was not the only one to be feared, for there was another monstrosity hated universally by all, even the overseers. The Drowned God.
It was not merely a sea god, yet it had much power over it. Poseidon did not get to meet it for obvious reasons, but he had been warned not to underestimate it.
From his understanding, it was a former overseer, a former Old God, who had gone rogue. The aforementioned lieutenant of the Merlin King had joined its forces as it attempted to usurp the network and take hold of the mortal souls sleeping in it. Poseidon compared it to an unholy mix of Tartarus and Pentos, with a smattering of Kronos' malice. A true annoyance to deal with.
Thankfully, it did not appear to have a champion. Only unhinged zealots. It's lieutenant, on the other hand…
There were other gods to the east, hundreds of them in fact, but only one of them did Poseidon think warranted some scrutiny at the moment. The fiery one, R'hllor, who seemed entirely occupied feuding with his own nemesis, was also absent from the gathering. In fact, only the gods residing in Westeros seem to be present, and none of them were fond of any outsiders.
It further confused Poseidon on why he was accepted so easily then.
And then, there was R'hllor's nemesis, the so-called
Great Other… Yet he also seemed to be absent. Strangely, none seemed to have a strong opinion of him, or her, for none know what the being looked alike, aside from giving them the creeps. Only the Builder (or was it the Smith?) seemed eager to speak of it to him. The being was worshiped by what Poseidon understood to be some sort of ice elves. He had not dealt with elves much, only when he had to deal with the Norse gods.
The Great Other was also worshiped as the Stranger by followers of the Seven, ironically giving the god knowledge of the realm through that act, and begrudgingly accepted as part of the pantheon of Westerosi gods.
Poseidon likened him to Hades, not popular nor welcome on Olympus, yet still accepted as one of them. He wondered about the rest of the Seven, for he had not met the Father, Mother, or the Crone. They could only stay in the network for so long before Percy's mind would suffer, and the Old Gods did not seem to be the type to host a gathering on a whim.
Perhaps they may yet meet them later on.
Movement from his lap had him look down - when did she climb onto his lap? - as the cat stretched lazily and opened her green eyes to stare curiously at them.
"About time for you to wake up, Myrcella. Today is Sansa's wedding, and she gave you the honor to be her handmaiden."
The lion cub's eyes widened as she looked at them both before blinking out of existence, causing him to chuckle deeply.
We get a look at what's happening beyond the Wall. To summarize, Bloodraven tried to tempt Jon into becoming his disciple, but dutiful Jon would not have it. A lot of arguing unfolded, with a lot of things spoken off-screen that I will expand upon later, and Jon eventually convinced Bloodraven to work with the Night's Watch.
Mance Rayder having his entire army of Wildlings camping in the utterly barren Frostfangs was a recipe for disaster. GRRM strikes again with his lack of logistical knowledge. How would such an army feed itself? Jeor had a very good answer to that.
They don't.
I was tempted to write an entire chapter about Percy and Poseidon larping about in the Weirwood Network, but decided against it. I think I left enough hints so readers can understand what happened, but feel free to leave me comments for clarification or, better yet, hit me up on Discord.
Suffice it to say, the gods are a messy topic. Makes me glad for our monotheistic religions. Praise be! Jesus is King! Allah Akbar! So much more simple.
If you would like to read four chapters ahead, or simply support me, look me up on Patr(eo)n under the same pen name.