Chapter XVIII
The Red Keep
In a squat, heavy-stoned, half-round, grey-faced, ugly tower across the bailey from Maegor's Holdfast lay the dungeons of the Red Keep. There was a forbidding and faintly sinister look about that tower, called by some the Traitor's Walk. No banners fluttered from its spire, no men patrolled its battlements, and even its narrow arrow slits were covered by iron bars. This tower held its secrets deep, and its exterior betrayed nothing of what went on within. The only entrance was a narrow postern at the foot of the tower, facing the holdfast, and barred by a black metal door.
Aratan stood in the courtyard and looked up at the tower, which loomed coldly and indifferently above him. He had donned his hauberk once more. He fingered the hilt of his sword, feeling the tension in the air. Behind him stood Ohtar and the other housecarls.
"Is this truly our plan?" asked Ingold.
"I can think of no other," said Finrod.
"Baranor, have you spied your passage back to the Hand's tower?" said Aratan.
"Aye my lord, if we can get out of there afterwards, I see a way I might make it to the godswood, and cutting through there to the Hand's tower," said Baranor, glancing with sharp eyes at the guards on the walls and other towers surrounding them.
"You will need to pass that way swiftly and unseen once it begins," said Ohtar.
"I was a ranger for many years, just as our kinsmen Mablung. I have my ways," Baranor replied.
A strong wind buffeted them, wrapped their cloaks tight around them, and made the Baratheon and Lannister banners atop the walls snap and flutter.
"As soon as we step within, the Queen will be told. Let us be quick, brothers," said Aratan, and he strode forward towards the dungeon tower. His kinsmen followed behind him. Ingold's buckler clattered against his hauberk and sheathed swordswith each step.
The postern was narrow, only wide enough for a single man to pass through, and it was flanked by two guards, in jerkins of boiled leather and Lannister livery, each leaning upon a halberd topped with a heavy axe blade and wickedly sharp steel spike. They stared at the approaching men of Gondor with the lazy stupidity of cruel men. The taller and broader of the pair scratched at a flea-bitten beard and straightened up to glare at them.
"Who goes there?" the guard demanded, holding his halberd across the door.
"Captain Aratan," said Ohtar, stepping forward of the others and assuming a herald's loud, confident voice. Aratan composed his face in an expression of lordly arrogance and detachment. The guard narrowed his eyes in suspicion.
"And what is Captain Aratan's errand in the dungeons today?" said the guard snidely. He spoke with the tone of a man who enjoyed holding his meagre powers over others.
"We are here to question the traitor Lord Stark," replied Ohtar.
"What sort of questions?" asked the guard's companion.
"The Queen's questions, and if you bar my passage for a moment longer you shall answer for it to Her Grace," Aratan said, words commanding in tone.
At the mention of the Queen and the command of Aratan's speech, the pair paled and quickly pulled their halberds back. The taller one quickly stammered: "Of course, of course, milords!" and he bowed his head as they passed him by.
In single file they went through the postern-door and into a narrow, dark passage. It came out in a small entrance hall. The walls and floor were plain grey stone. A shaft of sunlight from a narrow high window lit the room in a gloomy half-darkness. At the other end of the hall was a wooden desk, covered in pieces of parchment and heavy ledgers and books. Behind it stood two more guards flanking an ironbound door, mailed and helmeted, swords and bucklers on their belts. But leaning upon the desk was a slight man standing in a dark grey aketon. In silver thread upon his breast was a badge, a black shield bearing a single silver sword point down. The badge marked him as a knight of the Ironguard.
The Ironguard was one of the Seven Brotherhoods and was formally charged with stewardship of the Iron Throne itself, or so Aratan had always been told. In truth, since the days of Maegor the Cruel, they had been entrusted with less savoury tasks. The King's Justice, the royal executioner, was traditionally selected from amongst their number, and the six other knights of the Brotherhood were given likewise disreputable and even sordid duties. These knights, if knights they even were for many of them had never sworn any vows, were not selected for honour, nor even for skill at arms, but for silence and loyalty. There were reasons why Ser Ilyn Payne served as the Brother-Captain of the Ironguard, despite his muteness. The dungeons of the Red Keep were their domain, and few spoke openly of what the men of the Ironguard did in the name of the Crown within its black depths.
Aratan recognized the Ironguard on duty. His name was Ser Ganelon Lucan, he had ridden in the Hand's tournament, though Aratan had not faced him personally. Ganelon was a pale man, his skin so pale as to be frightful, a contrast with his hair which was black as jet. He wore it short and slicked back on his head, which together with his narrow and pointed face gave him the look of a slippery eel. His eyes too were so dark they appeared black, and he stared at Aratan and the Numenoreans with a look of boredom.
"Hail Ser Ganelon," Aratan said in greeting.
"Hail Captain Aratan," Ganelon replied in a soft voice. "What business brings you here?"
"I have questions for that traitor Stark," said Aratan.
Ser Ganelon drummed his fingers upon the desk and tilted his head. In a quiet voice he said: "Truly? I had not been told that the prisoner would be questioned…"
"I have only recently learned of this treason. He was the Marshal of the Host which I am called upon to command, I must uncover whatever intrigues amongst my lieutenants he has already sewn. The full extent of his treachery must be uncovered" Aratan replied grimly.
"Ah, I see. And how do you plan to do this? The Queen has commanded that no hand be lain upon him," said Ser Ganelon, as if he was regretting the fact.
"We Numenoreans have our ways,"
Ganelon smiled, a joyless curling of the lips, and said: "I have heard the tales. Very well then, if you think you might extract something useful from him, go ahead. He's down in the black cells, ask the gaoler to show you the way,"
"My thanks, good ser," replied Aratan courteously.
Behind the door was a narrow spiral staircase, the ways leading both up and down masked in darkness. Torches burnt upon sconces in the walls. The upper levels of the dungeons were reserved for highborn prisoners and common criminals, the black cells were below ground level.
Seizing a torch, Aratan led his men downwards. He could barely see outside of the flickering orange light of his torch. The stair was very narrow, and as it spiralled down into blackness Aratan hoped he would not find himself having to fight his way out. In such narrow places, a single man could hold back dozens.
They came at last to another door, this one an iron grate. The stair still spiralled downwards further, but no one but the Ironguard would willingly go to the lowest level of the dungeon. The hinges on the grating creaked in protest as Aratan pushed the door open.
The air was dank and chill in the chamber beyond the grate. A burning brazier in the center of the bare stone floor gave a little light in aid to the torches on the walls. On three sides, the walls gave way to bare, dark passages, where the black cells themselves would line.
Aratan glanced behind him. Two more guards flanked the door, and they stared at his men with suspicion and contempt. They were mailed and girt with swords, as their comrades at the entrance had been. The son of Isildur felt a pang of regret. They had the look of plain, simple folk about them. He had been on many battlefields in his life, but never had he enjoyed the killing, and it was always the normal people caught up in the quarrels of lords which he felt most sorry for.
The gaoler sat in a corner, behind another plain wooden desk. He was a heavyset man, with broad shoulders and a thick neck beneath a bald head. Like Ser Ganelon, his desk was covered in books and scrolls, but unlike Ser Ganelon this man had a stench of wine about him, and there were empty flagons and a half-eaten cheese and loaf of bread before him. Next to him was an opened barrel of water, for the guards on duty.
The gaoler stood up slowly, like the half-drunk he was. A ring of keys rattled on his belt.
"How may I serve ye, milord?" he slurred. Aratan grasped the hilt of the dagger at his belt. He glanced backwards and nodded at Baranor. He knew they must act swiftly. They would not have much time once it began.
"I am here to see a prisoner," Aratan replied. The gaoler came out around the desk and approached them. His footsteps were heavy.
"At whose command?" asked the gaoler, the fog of wine clearing from his head. His eyes were clearer now.
It all happened at once, in a second, in the moment between one breath and another. With heavy grip Aratan covered the man's mouth, drawing his dagger and shoving the point up right below the man's chin. The man froze in terror of the sharp steel wavering near his neck.
Behind him, Ohtar and Baranor turned as one, drawing daggers of their own. They were upon the guards without a cry or a sound. Their hands covered noses and mouths, and their blades quickly opened up two throats. Both guards slumped noiselessly, blood seeping down into their mail.
"I wish to see Lord Stark," Aratan whispered to his captive. "Do you know where he is?"
The gaoler nodded stiffly.
Aratan told him: "You will take us to him. You will not make a sound. Your life shall be spared if you do this. If you call out or raise alarums, we may all perish in this place but I swear to you that you shall die with us. Do you understand?"
The gaoler nodded again.
"Lead on,"
With Aratan's dagger prodding him in his back, the unfortunate gaoler led them down a long, dark passage. Their torch cast fleeting light and deep shadows all around them. They passed by row after identical row of heavy iron-bound doors on either side of them. There was not a sound but that of their footsteps against the floor. Some of the cells looked like they have not been opened in a long, long time.
How many of these black cells are occupied? Aratan wondered. How many men have been forgotten in this place?
He did not have long to muse though. Finally the gaoler stopped at one particular cell.
"He-he's in there, milord," the man told them.
"Truth now, that is Lord Stark's cell?" asked Aratan.
"Yes, milord, on my honour," replied the gaoler nervously.
Ohtar pulled open a slat on the cell door and held his torch to it, peering inside.
"Aratan, Ned is here," the squire said.
"Which key is it?" asked Aratan.
"The th-third on me b-belt, milord," was the answer.
"Many thanks, master gaoler," Isildur's son said softly. He cranked back and clubbed the man over the head with the pommel of his dagger. His blow was true and hard and the bald man slumped to the ground, as if all the bones had gone out of his body, unconscious.
"I do not envy the headache he shall have when he awakens, but he led us truly enough," said Finrod. He stooped and took the keys from the gaoler's belt.
Aratan winced at the heavy sound of the key turning within the lock. It echoed within the quiet of the dungeons. The door swung open, its hinges scraping loudly.
Within the black cell, squinting into the torchlight and raising a hand to shade his eyes, sat Lord Eddard Stark.
His skin was pale, his clothes and cloak were tattered and torn in places, and his hair was matted and tangled, but otherwise he appeared unharmed. His eyes, unused to the light after so long in the dark, could not make out his rescuers.
"Now here is an unlikely meeting," Aratan whispered with a smile, stepping into the cell.
"Aratan!" Ned exclaimed in surprise as he recognized him, voice too loud.
"Shh, quietly my friend," urged Aratan, raising a finger to his lips. He crouched down by his sitting friend.
"Go bring Eddard some water and that food on the gaoler's desk," he commanded. Ingold nodded and disappeared down the corridor.
"How are you here? What has happened?" Ned asked in quick succession.
"We're here to bring you out of this place," Aratan replied. "You have many questions, I know, but we have only little time. Your daughters eluded the Queen,"
At these words, Ned's solemn face broke out into a smile of the purest relief and happiness that Aratan had ever seen.
"Where are they? Are they safe?" he asked.
"Yes my friend, your daughter Arya, clever Arya, she hid herself and Sansa in a hidden passage in the Tower of the Hand, where we found them. The Queen summoned me to win my allegiance, but she shall not have it. We need to get you out of here,"
"You're risking your lives for me…" Ned said quietly. "You should have taken my daughters and left. Cersei won't lay a hand upon me, my fear is for what she may do to them,"
"We're taking you and your daughters both out of here. The Queen shall have neither you nor them," Aratan replied in a stern voice.
"Catelyn has Cersei's own brother, Tywin Lannister's son. They have me. Leave me here and get my daughters to safety, they will exchange me for the Imp and make peace," said Ned. In his voice there was a quaver of fear – But not fear for himself.
"And leave Joffrey on the Iron Throne, King in the eyes of all the Realm? Let your son Robb drag the Northmen into war with the Lannisters? We need you to make this peace Ned, need you free, not a captive!" Aratan said, his own voice an urgent, desperate plea. He thought of his father, somewhere in the Riverlands, daring the lion to strike and reveal its true nature.
Eddard's eyes were pensive, lost inside his own thought for a while. When he looked back up, his face was set and grim.
"Very well," the Lord of Winterfell stood up, fists clenched. "What is your plan?"
Ingold returned with the bread and cheese, and a bucket that sloshed with cold water.
"Eat a little, for you strength, and wash your face, you shall need a shave and a haircut,"
Ned wore his hair long around the shoulders in the northern style. After he had a few mouthfuls of food he immersed his head into the bucket of water and washed out the dirt and sweat that had matted his hair together. Ohtar and Aratan set upon him with their daggers, cutting off the dark locks, cropping it short as the Dunedain wore it. It was an inelegant job, but it served well enough.
"His beard as well," Aratan said. With dagger of his own, Finrod cut down the northern lord's beard till Ned was, if not clean shaven, then at least only with some stubble left.
"If this is meant to be a disguise, Aratan, it'll need more than this," said Ned when they had finished, rubbing his shaven jaw where his beard had once been.
"Now your cloak Baranor, and your mail too. Put these on Ned," commanded Aratan. The housecarl unclasped his grey cloak, and then hauled off his mail hauberk and surcoat. Next came the padded gambeson underneath, leaving Baranor clad only in tunic and breeches.
Ned quickly donned Baranor's garb, gambeson and hauberk both, and then swung the cloak around his shoulders and clasped it with the rayed star-shaped broach which all the housecarls of Isildur wore. He bound his surcoat round his wasit with Baranor's belt, sword sheathed on his right and dagger on his left. With his hair cut short, his beard shaved off, his grey eyes set in his lean face, and now clad in the proud and somber garb of the Guard of the Tower of Minas Ithil, Eddard Stark appeared a man of Numenor to any who might not know it was him.
"Never thought I'd bear Isildur's sigil upon my breast," Ned commented, holding out his arms and looking himself over. His fingers brushed over the silver crescent moon above the white tree.
"I daresay you shall be glad for it ere this day is done, and for the likeness of your Stark features to that of Andunie. You make a splendid Dunadan, Ned," replied Aratan, standing with crossed arms. The disguise was not impenetrable, any who knew Eddard personally could see through it, but it would mask his identity well enough to the guards and servants who lay between his cell and the Tower of the Hand, who would hopefully only see him from afar and in passing.
"We must be going, quickly before anyone is sent down to check on our friend the gaoler," urged Ohtar, peering down the passage towards the stairs. They could not guess when someone would come down to relieve the gaoler or the two guardsmen which lay slain.
"Aye, best be off. Where is this hidden passage you spoke of? Where does it lead?" said Ned.
Leaving his cell to its darkness, they walked with long, swift steps back to the main room, where the faces of the slain guards were slowly turning white and cold. Aratan and Ohtar led, followed behind by Ned, Ingold and Finrod, with the unarmoured Baranor bringing up the rear.
"Do you remember when your daughter slipped out of the castle a few weeks past? And she could not be found for the better part of a day?" Aratan whispered, pulling open the iron grated door that led back to the stairway.
"Aye, that I do," said Ned. He moved up behind Aratan in the single file up the spiralling dark stairs.
"That passage is where she and her sister took shelter. It leads to the sewers, and thence to the river, outside of the city. We left your daughters at the entrance to it, we will bring you to them," replied Aratan.
"What of the guards at the entrance? Surely they will guess this ruse when they see Baranor," Ned said questioningly, voice low and urgent.
"Leave that to us," Ingold replied grimly.
Aratan's heart was beating hard within his chest, feeling like it was fit to burst. His hands felt dry and strange. There was no fear as he led Ned into the entrance hall of the dungeon tower. No fear, only an anticipation. It was the same feeling that stirred in him when he sat atop his charger and waited for the heralds to blow their horns at the jousts of the Hand's tournament. The same feeling was always in him before battle or fight or the hunt of some dangerous beast. Neither fear nor anxiety, but a heightened awareness of himself. He felt the weight of the mail on his shoulders and hips, and the feeling of the sword's hilt in his hand, the brushing of his cloak against his legs, the sound of his boot heels against the stones, the breathing of the housecarls behind him.
The hall was gloomy and quiet as before. Ser Ganelon looked up from his ledgers and scrolls, pale face regarding Aratan quizzically as Isildur's son turned towards him. He spotted a footstool sitting by the side of the table. Ganelon's black eyes flicked over Aratan's shoulder and came to rest upon Ned's face. They narrowed for a moment, and then widened in recognition. Ganelon was springing to his feet, he was opening his mouth to cry out, he was setting his hand upon his sword hilt, but Aratan was faster.
The son of Isildur sprang forward. He swept up the wooden stool in his hands and, in one step, whirled it above his head and brought it crashing down upon Ser Ganelon's skull. The stool burst into pieces with the force of the strike. With a strangled cry, the Ironguard knight was sent careening by the blow, falling down first upon the table and then slid to the ground. He lay still and unmoving.
Tossing the pieces of broken wood aside, Aratan turned back to his comrades. One of the guards already lay with opened throat, and Ohtar stood above him, wiping the blood from his dagger. The other double over with a pained grunt, Ingold's knee driven into his groin. The old housecarl swung a mailed fist into the man's face, and he collapsed to the ground with bloody mouth and broken teeth.
"The guards at the door will have heard all this commotion. Finrod, with me," Ohtar barked out, tapping the younger man on the shoulder.
The two of them flanked the entranceway, backs flat against the walls. In their hands, daggers gleamed dully in the half-light.
Surely as Ohtar had said, the door was flung open with a crash. The two guardsmen came running in, halberds in hand. In their haste, they neglected to watch their flanks. Ohtar and Finrod pounced upon them as soon as they entered. The first guard, the taller, broader one, fell with a gasp as the old squire's dagger plunged into the back of his neck. Finrod bludgeoned the other over the head with his pommel, and sent the shorter guard sprawling.
"We might get free of here yet," said Ned, looking around at the dead and unconscious bodies that now littered the hall.
"There's still a long way to go, and little time. Baranor, you go out first. Make sure you stay out of sight!" Aratan said, looking at the ranger sternly. Baranor's part in the plan was always going to be the most difficult and precarious. Slipping from the dungeon to the Tower of the Hand without being seen or caught would be no small feat, even if the whole Keep was not already watchful.
"Worry yourself not, my lord. I shall be at the Hand's own door to greet you!" Baranor laughed lightly.
"Stop talking about it and get on with it," urged Ohtar, sheathing his dagger. "Make haste, damn fool!"
"Farewell for a little while, brothers," Baranor said with a wink, and he quickly disappeared outside and was gone. Aratan silently counted to ten slowly within his head. No alarums were sounded, no bells or horns. They still had a little time.
"Now for the rest of us. Follow behind me as always, stay calm and look straight ahead. If we are very fortunate, the rest of the Keep may not even know what we have done until it is accomplished," Aratan instructed.
"Perhaps, but when has luck ever smiled upon anyone so?" Ohtar grumbled to himself, taking up his usual spot behind and to the right of Aratan.
Aratan said: "Are you ready Ned?"
"Aye," Eddard replied.
Aratan set a hand upon the cool metal of the postern, took a deep breath, and then shoved it open.
Day was waning into evening. It was perhaps the sixth hour past noon, and the shadows in the courtyards of the Red Keep were lengthening and deepening. Never had a walk seemed so long to Aratan son of Isildur than that one. To their left, Maegor's Holdfast stood menacingly. To Aratan, every window and arrow slit seemed full of unfriendly eyes. Every rustle of their mail and crunch of gravel beneath their booth seemed unbearably loud. Every servant and castle worker, saddle-makers and smiths, farriers and gardeners, who looked up and peered at them in passing seemed about to cry out and expose them. Every second, Aratan waited for the cries, for the shower of arrows and crossbow bolts from the battlements, and yet there was nothing.
They came to the winding stairs which led from the lower bailey up to the upper. A wall of red stone and a strong gatehouse divided the two courtyards, so that even a foe who pierced the outer defenses could not come immediately to the holdfast, and might still be swept back with arrow and missile. They passed beneath the raised portcullis. The Tower of the Hand was before them, across another bailey. They were nearly there.
At that moment, the air was rent by the sound Aratan had dreaded. Behind them, a bell from the Traitor's Walk pealed out its loud ring. It rang again and again, and went on. Voices were raising, there were cries and shouts behind them.
"Alarum! Alarum! Alarum!"
Ohtar gritted his teeth. "Fly you fools!"
They ran, breaking out into a sudden sprint. The Tower which once appeared so close now seemed so far away. All around them men were shouting from the walls.
"There! Look there! It's them!"
"After them!"
Arrows and bolts clattered on the cobble-stones about their feet. Aratan felt the air as one passed by his ear with a buzz with an angry hornet.
Baranor appeared at the top of the steps leading to the entrance of the Tower, standing upon the threshold of the doorway. He was gesturing wildly, roaring "Make haste!"
One after another, they ran past the threshold. As Ingold's foot left the doorway, Baranor slammed it shut. There was a bench sitting close by, heavily fashioned of oak. With a heave, Baranor and Finrod plucked it up and with a crash they tossed it down across the doorway, bracing it against the battered timbers.
Baranor sighed. "The whole Keep is roused behind you,"
Ned was shaking his head "That barricade won't hold long once they bring their axes, which way to the passage?"
There was a loud, low bang and the doors shuddered in its hinges, sounding as if someone was ramming his shoulder against it.
"This way! Quickly!" shouted Ohtar.
The small band raced down the halls of the Tower of the Hand, through the desolation and the unburied corpses. As they reached the end of the entrance hall and rounded the corner, they heard a crash behind them. The door had been battered open. Aratan glanced backwards. Goldcloaks and men-at-arms in Lannister livery were dashing after them, swords and halberds and crossbows were in their hands. Their voices were raised as hounds after their quarry.
Like a ship in full sail on the winds of an oncoming storm, they flew down the corridors, boots thumping against the flagstones. Aratan's heart was racing in his chest, his blood rushing in his veins. They leapt up a flight of stairs and turned to the north corridor. Crossbows clattered behind them. Bolts hissed in the air.
Ohtar was the first to the door of the study. He flung it open, and with a crash overturned the table nearby and picked up for another barricade. Finrod and Baranor grabbed the chairs and other furniture in the room.
Arya and Sansa stood, clad in stolen servants' clothes as Aratan had instructed them to be, with unlit torches in their hands. Arya was fumbling with a flint and steel, but dropped it as the Numenoreans poured in. For a moment their father looked at them expectantly, for a moment they did not recognize him with his short hair and shorn beard. The moment passed quickly.
"Father!" the Stark girls exclaimed together, and they rushed into his arms.
Relief, joy and gratitude washed over Eddard's face all at once. "Girls! I thought I'd lost you!"
His daughters' shoulders were shaking, tears coming again at the reunion.
Ohtar was pushing a book case across the closed door. "We've no time! We must go!"
Ned pulled the girls in front of him and looked at them steadily. They wiped the tears from their eyes. "You must be brave now, my daughters. You must be fearless and strong as the wolves you are,"
The door, and the barricade which barred it, shook as someone on the other side struck it. It held fast. Lady growled, grey bristles rising on her back, baring her snow-white fangs.
Baranor grabbed the torch and struck the flint and steel. A shower of sparks lit the rags wrapped around the end of the brand. He sheltered it with a hand and blew upon it and a small flame was kindled. Aratan lit the other torch from the fire. The door shook in its hinges again, still holding fast.
"Through there?" said Ned, eying the gaping, lightless passage that opened in the wall. The banging on the doorway grew louder, the sound of armoured gauntlets ringing against the timbers.
"Haste is more needed than caution, quickly now!" said Aratan, stepping to the threshold and casting his fire's light into the tunnel. Blank, bare walls and a dank floor disappeared into the gloom beyond. The door of the study was rattling and banging continuously now, and the raised voices of their pursuers could be heard on the other side.
They filed into the passage, and when the last of them were within, Aratan seized the iron handle of the stone door and pulled it shut behind him with a deep thud. They were engulfed in utter blackness, the noises from the other side of the wall deafened by the stone. Only the fleeting light of their torches illuminated the passage, else they would have been blinded.
"You know the way, Arya?" Aratan whispered.
"I do! You can follow me!" Arya replied in a small voice.
"Lead on, little one," said Ohtar.
The air was stale and musty beneath the Red Keep, and the shadows were deep and dark as the depths of the sea. Outside of the pool of light cast by their sputtering torches, there was nothingness before them and behind them, all they saw was rough-hewn stone walls and floor and ceiling. Arya went in the lead, walking softly on the balls of her feet, so that she could scarcely be heard. Behind her went Aratan, and Ned, and behind them were Baranor, Finrod and Ingold. Sansa walked in the middle, eyes downcast and face pale, with Lady padding quietly at her side, ears pricked up and golden eyes gleaming. In the rear came Ohtar, watchful and wary for pursuit behind them.
How long they traveled down that dark tunnel, Aratan could not guess. At length, they came to a right turn, and from there an even narrow passage, where the walls brushed against their shoulders and the Numenoreans had to stoop to get through. This hall seemed to run just as long as the previous, until finally it came to a spiralling staircase. Here Aratan paused and let the others pass him by, waiting for Ohtar at the rear.
"Have we eluded our hunters?" he asked in a whisper. Ohtar grimaced.
"Listen," said the squire. The silence was immense. Then, distantly and distinctly, Aratan heard the scrape of armoured boots on stone. Still far off, but it was there and the sound was of many footfalls.
"They found the hidden door," said Aratan.
Ohtar growled: "High praise from the Queen for a traitor's head."
There was a hard gleam in Aratan's eyes, like a distant fire burning.
"I swore they will not have us, and they shall not while I have any strength left in me," he said. At this Ohtar managed a smile
"You sound like your father,"
Down the twisting stairs they went with haste, torches bobbing and spitting sparks. Arya, clad in grey and brown, was a fleeting figure on the edge of their vision before them. The rumour of armour-clad feet was ever-present behind them, though distant, and Lady began to rumble and growl at the sound of it even as they fled before it.
Suddenly Arya stopped and turned. To their right was a patch of fresher stonework, the mortar less aged and cracked, the stones cleaner cut. It looked like a doorway had been walled in, but the job had been lazily done and incomplete, for at the bottom left corner was an open gap, but tiny and confined, and beyond it just more darkness.
"Through here!" said Arya, sidling through the narrow space. It was a tight fit even for her. The mailed Numenoreans looked at each other dubiously.
"Where the child leads, we must follow," said Finrod. With a sigh, he went down on hands and knees and, turning this way and then that, slowly squeezed his way through. There was barely space enough for him to fit, but he made it.
In the same fashion, the others followed. Thin Sansa had no difficulty. With growls and scratching of claws on stone, even Lady the direwolf passed through, though the space was small.
"Let us hope the guards miss this postern," said Ned when he stood up and brushed the dust from Baranor's surcoat.
They found themselves in a wider, more proper hallway on the other side, the stonework finer. There were even sconces in the wall, though without torches or lights. This hall was short, and at its end a heavy, dusty wooden door with an iron ring for a handle.
"Passages within passages, secrets within secrets. Old Maegor the Cruel built many escapes and hiding-holes into this castle," said Ned, shaking his head.
"This comes out in the cellars! And that leads to the room with the monsters," said Arya, running to the door.
Grabbing the ring, she yanked it open with a grunt.
On the other side, standing with torches of their own, two armed men stared back at them with wide eyes. One wore the goldcloak, the other the scarlet of a Lannister livery man.
For a fleeting second, no one spoke.
"Alarum! Alarum" roared the Lannister guard in a loud voice, sweeping out his sword. Finrod sprang forward and was upon him before the word was finished, driving his shoulder into the man's gut and wrapping his arms around him, driving him back bodily.
"Down here! They're here!" cried the goldcloak, turning and grabbing his sword hilt. He was too slow. Lady bounded forth and pounced. She bloodied her muzzle as her fangs tore out his throat. He fell with a half-scream that turned into a gurgle.
Sansa screamed in fright, the sound echoing into distant halls.
The Lannister guard's sword clattered to the ground, and Finrod sent the man himself crashing upon his head with a sudden sweep of his leg.
For another moment, there was no sounds but the direwolf tearing and gnawing at the dead man's flesh. Then from up another set of stairs, a cacophony of voices and clattering armour. Much closer now than the last had been.
"Combing the catacombs for us, I should have known," said Ohtar grimly.
"Hurry, this way!" cried Arya, already running into the gloom.
They ran in dim light amongst crates and barrel smelling of salt pork and smoked fish. Louder behind them grew the sounds of their pursuers and the shouts of the guards. Arya skidded to a halt at a door suddenly, covered in dust and looking long undisturbed. She shoved it open and disappeared onto the other side. As Aratan plunged into the passageway, he heard calls from behind them.
"There they are! Quickly or we'll lose them!"
One after another, they went in single file down a short, constricted hallway, rough stonework hemming them in on either side.
Suddenly the walls fell away and they found themselves standing alone in pitch dark. Above them, they could see the ribs and arches of a vaulted ceiling. A cold chill was in the air, and a sudden feeling like they were not alone. Huge shapes loomed in the shadows, just outside of the firelight. There were the outlines of jagged teeth, still sharp and hungry despite the ages. Black bones gleamed, the reflection of the torches twisting and dancing upon them as if the fire was a living thing.
With a start, Aratan realized that this hall was full of the skulls of dragons. The largest, with horns like spears and teeth like swords, sat at the end of the hall, towering and lording above the lesser drakes all around it. Though long dead there seemed a knowing malice still in those bones, and the empty eye sockets of that skull stared at them malevolently.
"Balerion," said Ohtar with a strange laugh. "Long has it been since last we met, old wyrm. The years have been less kind to you than to me I deem,"
There was no time for reminiscing however, for the rumour of pursuit behind them was drawing near now.
"Where is the door you spoke of Arya?" he said.
"Here! On the other side of the biggest skull!" the girl said, springing nimbly amongst the dead bones.
As they hurried after her, Aratan perceived that they had entered by a side door into a long hall, the main entrance of which was towards the far end and whose doors were rusted and looked long shut and forgotten.
On the other side of Balerion's skull was another door, covered by an iron grating, and on the other side a stairway disappeared downwards. It creaked and protested as they slowly shoved it open, forcing rusty hinges to turn.
Yet Eddard hung back from the rest, and he gazed intently at the faces of Arya and Sansa with a look of grave longing. Then he turned around, and faced back towards the door from where they had come. He stood and listened at the approaching footsteps. Sansa's direwolf, blood staining her muzzle, was growling once more. No foes had entered the hall yet, but by the sound they soon would. His long face was grim, and fierceness shone in his eyes. He set his hand upon the hilts of Baranor's sword and drew it forth, razor edges catching the torchlight.
"Take my daughters and go, I shall hold them back," he said simply.
Arya and Sansa was the first to grasp what he had told them.
"Father, please!" said Sansa, taking him by the hand as if to pull him along with them. Tears were welling in her eyes again.
"No, you have to come with us! You can't stay!" Arya cried out, throwing herself upon her father and wrapping her arms around his waist.
"Go, now! Go! They do not know that you are with us. When they see me, they will stop this hunt and you might yet find your way to Winterfell again," said Ned. With gentle but firm hand he pried them away from him and stepped away. His gaze softened at their pleas. "I am sorry I ever brought you to this place, but leave me and let your father do what he must!"
"Ned, you can't stay! Not after-" Aratan began to protest, but the Lord of Winterfell spoke and cut him off:
"Take my daughters and get you free of this place. They will not harm me, too valuable am I, but I will not have my daughters captive at anyone's hands! Not while I might still save them yet!" In Ned's voice there was the ferocity of a direwolf.
Aratan looked back towards the doorway, and the narrow corridor which led into the hall. Then he remembered the stairway of the dungeons.
In a narrow place, one might hold back many.
Aratan's own sword flashed in the red torchlight as he unsheathed it.
"I will stand by you here, Eddard, though all the hosts of Casterly Rock might beset us,"
Ned asked in a quiet voice "Are you certain? If you are taken they may not put such value upon your life…"
Looking at the son of Isildur's face, Eddard had his answer.
The Numenoreans were staring at Ned and Aratan, struck silent in their own turn. Ned turned towards them.
"Ohtar, you are Isildur's man?" he said.
"Till my lord release me, or death take me, or the world end," said Ohtar.
"Isildur trusts you more than any other, trusts you like his own kin. I beg you Ohtar, will you take my daughters and guide them to safety? Will you return them to Winterfell?"
The scarred shield-bearer looked down at the daughters of Lord Stark, pale and frightened, tears upon their cheeks, still begging their father to come with them though their words were unheeded.
"I will," Ohtar said. "I swear it,"
"Then fly now! Take your companions and go!" Ned said.
"I stay with Aratan," said old Ingold quietly.
Finrod said: "And I,"
Baranor spoke last: "Nor shall I abandon our captain now,"
"No Baranor, go with Ohtar!" Aratan said in a voice of command "You are unarmed and unarmoured, fly now! I command it!"
Baranor stood, and in his gaze there was an agony as he was torn in his heart between the love of his captain and his captain's command. Then at last he turned and as the son of Isildur commanded him ran and fled down the steps and disappeared.
Tears were flowing down Sansa's fair cheeks, and Needle was swishing the air in Arya's hand, but Ohtar plucked them both up in his strong arms and, throwing them over his shoulders, carried them away.
"Father! Father!" came Sansa's cries.
"No! Father! Let me go! Let me go!" Arya's protests echoed in the hall. With a last look at Aratan, Ohtar finally turned and disappeared beyond the door. Lady went running at his heels. The cries of the girls faded into the distance. A rattle of armour was drawing close now.
"They are coming," said Ingold, and in one hand he took up his sword and in the other grasped his iron buckler.
The four men, three Numenoreans and the Northman, walked back towards the side passage. They could hear their foes' clattering steps close by. They were clad all in mail, and they pulled up the coifs of their hauberks about their heads, so that only their eyes were left uncovered. The eyes of the Numenoreans gleamed terribly, and Eddard Stark's gaze was cold as winter night. They threw the torches away, leaving fire burning amongst dragon bones, casting fleeting light and dancing shadows upon the vaults of the ceiling. Then they unclasped their cloaks and they cast them aside. The white tree of Gondor on their breasts was pale in the gloom. Naked swords of steel, cold and sharp, were in their hands.
They flattened themselves up against the walls on either side of the entrance way, Ned and Finrod on the one side and Aratan and Ingold on the other. Aratan breathed in deeply, feeling the weight of his coif on his head. He could hear many heavy footsteps approaching, a rustle of mail shirts, the thud of boots, and the clatter of plate. He took his blade half-sword, one hand on the hilt and the other halfway down the blade. He met Eddard's gaze across the gap. The Lord of Winterfell nodded once.
Every moment they held the foe here was another moment for Ohtar and Baranor, and Sansa and Arya too. In his heart, Aratan felt the agony of failure, for Ned was throwing himself back into chains, but he would not break faith with his friend. He adjusted his grip upon the blade.
These Lannisters shall pay a dear price to take this one captive again Aratan thought grimly.
They heard the door crash open. They heard steps in the passage, many armed men coming, and though narrow that corridor was not long.
A goldcloak was first to appear, running in with torch held in upright hand. He did not see the warriors who waited in ambush. He did not see death till it sprung.
Up leapt Isildur's son! And with one sure stroke, he stabbed and drove his sword beneath the upraised arm which bore the burning brand. The iron rings of the goldcloak's byrnie beneath his armpit burst before his blade, and the blade drank blood greedily. The first foeman fell on his face with a stricken cry.
A second goldcloak knocked forward into the first even as Aratan ran him through, wearing only an arming cap upon his head and aketon on his chest. Ned's borrowed sword swung down in a wide arc, and the stroke was sure, and the guardsman fell with cloven head and face.
In headlong pursuit had the first two goldcloaks been caught, thinking they were hunting down escaped prisoners only. But their comrades had seen their deaths, and were the more prudent for it. Snarling wordless battle-shouts, they poured in with weapons bare, and at the fore came two Lannister livery men, halberds in hand, and by jabs and thrusts they discomfited the Northman and the Numenoreans and drove them back from the passage and amongst the dragon skulls. Scrambling over their friends' corpses, more followed with swords and maces clutched in hand.
Drive them back! Drive them back to the door or we are lost! Aratan thought desperately, and he turned aside one thrust and then another from the halberdier before him. Suddenly, seeing his chance, he caught up the pole-arm by the staff and stepped in close, and he drove his pommel into the face of the Lannister soldier, braining him and sending him crashing down. Struck dumb, the livery man dropped the halberd, and Aratan grabbed it from his falling fingers and, with sword held along its staff, wielded it in both hands.
"To the door!" Aratan shouted, and he threw himself into the tide of foes. In his hands the pole-ax whirled, and with spear-tip and ax-blade and hammer-head and iron-shod staff he stabbed and hacked and bashed and bore back all before him. Behind him, Finrod's eyes burned terribly, and grim Ingold's blade was bloody, and Eddard Stark dealt death with both sword-edges.
Those Lannister men who stood foremost braved the onslaught, for to turn their backs was to die, but those behind were free to fly just as swiftly as they had rushed forward. They did not endure the execution before them, but ran. And to those who fought on, their swords did not avail them, for razor's edge could not bite through coats of mail, the darting head of Aratan's halberd dismayed them and step by step they fell back or were slain.
Like the wave on the shore they had rolled into the hall, and like the wave which is spent they receded back, till none were left living and the others had fled. Aratan stood and rested his pole-arm against his shoulder, panting and breathing hard. They had left the hall littered with corpses, yet he counted only six men slain, and he knew more would come. The light of the torches glowed red and dull orange, and threw shadows which loomed and twisted.
"They will come again, soon," said Aratan.
"I know," said Ned.
"How many times can we do this?" Finrod was staring at the hewn bodies with pale face, but hard eyes.
"Until they are all dead, or we are," said Ingold.
"There will be more, and their knights and men-at-arms have not yet come," Aratan said grimly.
Then Ned cut them off suddenly: "Quiet! Listen!"
From beyond the doorway, they heard voices.
"They are in that hall?" said the first voice, calmer and with the accents of knighthood.
"Aye ser, where the old dragon skulls got left," came the reply, in rougher tones. "It's full of foes milord!"
"Aye, we was running after the prisoner when we were assailed!" said another.
"How many?" asked the calm voice.
"Ten I reckon, at least, from all the slaughter that was at the front!"
"Ten's small; A score!"
"And all mailed! Our swords did naught!"
"A score of mailed men?" laughed the first one "That I doubt. Follow me, we shall pull these rats from their hole,"
Aratan levelled his halberd, and on either side of him Eddard and the housecarls readied their swords.
The hall rang with clattering harness, and forth from the darkness of the passage stepped a knight of the Kingsguard. All in white, his ghostly pale armour covered him head and foot. The white cloak behind him brushed against the stones. Upon his head he wore a bascinet helmet, its pointed visor down, obscuring his features, rendering him an unknown and nameless thing; the faceless and implacable servant of the Crown.
The knight paused before them. Behind him came men-at-arms in crimson Lannister cloaks. In his hand he bore a longsword. Then he raised a white gauntlet to his visor and pulled it up. Behind it there was the drooping eyes and bearded face of Ser Meryn Trant.
"Dunedain," he said. Seeing the white tree on their chests and the fewness of their numbers his lips curled contemptuously.
"Ser Meryn, I did not think to meet you here," said Aratan from behind his coif.
"Isildurion," replied the Kingsguard, recognizing the voice. "Trying to spring your marshal from prison eh? You will hang for this treason,"
"If you have the mettle to take us. Can you endure that test, Ser Meryn?" replied Ned. Gritting his teeth, the Kingsguard slammed his visor back down.
"I hope you provide better sport now than you did upon the lists!" Aratan laughed and he brandished halberd and his sword alongside it.
"Take Stark! Kill the rest!" Ser Meryn snarled, voiced muffled by his helm. "Isildurion is mine,"
Again the hall sounded with shouts and cries. Behind Ser Meryn came armoured men-at-arms and Eddard and the housecarls met them sword to sword and hand to hand. Amongst the skulls of wyrms there was the clang and clash of cut and parry and the crunch of blade on mail rings. The retainers of House Lannister were hard men, they asked for no quarter and gave none in turn, and with swords, maces, and pole-axes the blows they struck were hard-handed.
Charging in like an angry boar, Ser Meryn ran at Aratan with a savage flurry of blows. Turning the staff of his halberd this way and then that, the son of Isildur blocked and parried, but was driven step by step till the gaping maw of Balerion was at his back.
Driving forward the butt-end of the pole-ax, Aratan rang a counter-blow off of Meryn's helm. The Kingsguard staggered back.
There! Aratan thought, gritting his teeth; He thrust the spear-tip forth violently, aiming for the shoulder joint between breastplate and spaulder.
Seizing his blade half-sword, Ser Meryn parried the thrust and caught the halberd by its head. With a cunning twist of his weapon, he yanked the pole-ax from Aratan's hands.
His sword, however, was still left for the son of Isildur to wield.
Seeing his chance, Meryn swung for Aratan's mail-clad head, missing barely as his foe slipped backwards. He threw another cut and missed again. Doggedly Meryn pursued his foe, slashing the air again and again as he tried to connect.
Damn it, even with my coif, without an arming cap I'll be brained and stunned if he hits! Aratan observed, seeing that every swing was aimed for his head.
Aratan reversed his sword, grabbing it by the blade. The hilt, with its steel crossbar and heavy pommel, was held forward. With keen eyes flashing he retreated and waited, watching for his chance, biding his time, dodging one way and then another. His foe was full clad in steel, in plates and mail and scales, and he knew what he needed to do.
Snarling frustration, Trant swung his blade down from above, two-handed, a heavy blow. Swiftly Aratan side-stepped, and the knight over-extended himself. He was exposed. Aratan brought his sword above his head and swung it down for Meryn's helm. The hilt of the sword came crashing down like a hammer.
The murder-stroke rang hard and true off the bascinet. The Kingsguard stumbled, stunned by its force. Before he could recover, Aratan was upon him. The hilt smote him heavily again, and a third time, leaving deep dents in his helm and the knight within struck dumb.
In a clamour of rattling armour, Ser Meryn Trant fell to the ground. Setting his foot upon him, Aratan shoved him onto his back, and kicked open his visor. With both hands on the hilt, he drove his sword down. In a gush of blood, Ser Meryn's face disappeared before the sword tip. Aratan leaned his weight onto the hilt until the knight lay still and dead.
His heart was pounding hard and his limbs were beginning to numb. He looked up from Meryn's corpse and saw the surviving Lannister men-at-arms retreating back to the door, and Eddard opening up the last one's throat. There was a sickening squelch when Aratan yanked his sword free from Ser Meryn's ruined face. He wiped the blood off with the white cloak of the Kingsguard, leaving a dark red stain upon it. Then he sheathed his sword and grabbed the halberd from the ground.
Ingold was panting with exertion, his buckler dented and worn, and his sword covered in gore. There was a far-off stare in Finrod's look. Ned was calmly and coolly staring around at the bodies across the hall. Eleven men lay slain, and none of them bore the badge of the white tree.
"Ser Meryn?" said Eddard when Aratan rejoined them by the side entrance.
"Dead," said Aratan.
"Good," said Ingold.
From the direction of the cellars, they could hear men shouting.
"More are coming," said Finrod.
Eddard's eyes were as ice. "Let them,"
Four more times did the goldcloaks and the men-at-arms of the Lannisters flood into the dragon's hall, and four more times was their flood stemmed and beaten back. They fought until their arms were as lead, their hearts felt fit to burst, even raising their weapons was an agony. They gulped air with great gasps, like drowning men struggling for breath. The floors grew slick with blood, and footing was treacherous amongst the bodies of the dead. Balerion stared down upon the carnage hungrily, and dead men lay across the teeth and jaws of other dragons, as if to be devoured by the dead beasts.
How long can we do this? How long until… Aratan shoved the final thought aside, even as he hacked apart a goldcloak's head with halberd-blade.
Another sally have been driven back. With slumped shoulders, the Numenoreans and the Northman stood amongst the gore and the death they had wrought. The torches were burning low, crackling. There were groans of men wounded who still lay amongst their comrades.
Aratan met Ned's look. The Lord of Winterfell sighed wearily.
Then from the passage's shadows clattered a crossbow!
The dart tore through the air.
Ingold cried out in anger and pain, dropping to one knee, his buckler clattering to the ground. In the right side of his chest the bolt was lodged, his life's blood seeping out around it.
The crossbowman stood at the entrance, and foolishly he scrambled to reload his bow. Roaring like a bear, Ingold charged him down, blade flashing in the firelight. With savage swing he clove the man apart, tearing open an awful wound from shoulder into torso, leaving his sword stuck up to the hilt in the crossbowman's chest. The crossbowman dropped dead, murderous weapon falling from cold fingers.
With one hand clutching at the bolt in his chest, Ingold staggered and then slumped to the ground against the wall.
"Ingold!" Finrod cried out, running to his fellow housecarl's side. With fumbling fingers he pulled back the flap of mail which covered the old man's face. Ingold had paled and his breath was shallow and strained. Aratan and Ned stood over him, ready to guard their fallen companion with sword and pole-ax. The fighting had lulled again and there was silence in the hall.
Finrod set a hand upon the shaft and made to draw it out of the wounded man's chest.
"No!" Ingold protested weakly. "Leave it. I am slain, I can feel it,"
Finrod started to speak: "I can't just-"
"Leave it be, kinsman. For me it is too late," Ingold was staring fixedly at Aratan even as he spoke, as if seeking to imprint this moment in his memory even as death took him.
"Finrod, brother, you must carry a message for me, for I am wounded to the death and cannot do so myself," said Ingold.
"Anything, my brother, anything," replied Finrod, voice hoarse.
"You must return home, Finrod, and when you do… Will you tell our lord that I stood by his son in this place? Will you tell Isildur that Ingold was faithful to the end?" the old man said, sounded weaker and weaker by the word.
Tears were shining in Finrod's eyes. "I will, Ingold, I swear it,"
He spoke no more. So passed Ingold son of Gethron, servant of the House of Isildur, who had been born of Numenor ere its fall.
In silence, Finrod wept over his companion's body. He raised his closed fist to his head, and then to his mouth.
Who am I to deserve such loyalty? Who am I to lead these men to death? Aratan thought, mirroring Finrod's gesture to the fallen Ingold. He shoved his sorrow down. There would be time to mourn later. Their work was not yet done.
For into the hall strode another knight of the Kingsguard, pale and silent as a wraith. His visor was raised, and Ser Mandon Moore's placid eyes stared at them flatly from within the helm. Like Trant before him, he was in full harness, but he had discarded the cloak. In his hand was sword of his own, and behind him came many men, many more than they had fought before.
"Captain Aratan," Ser Mandon said in his soft voice, seeing the sigils on their surcoats. He took in the ghastly scene, the wreckage of death scattered all over the hall. His gaze paused on Ser Meryn's white-clad form laying in the back, a red pool around his head.
"You have slain Ser Meryn?"
"Yes. He gave me no choice," replied Aratan. Ser Mandon nodded, seeming untroubled.
"Your choice is this: Lay down your arms and come with me, or else die. We are too many for you to resist this time," the Kingsguard said. Aratan glanced at Ned and nodded to him.
"But resist we shall," said Eddard. "No willing captives shall you have this day,"
"You choose death?" said Ser Mandon.
Then in the moment, Aratan recalled the tales he heard in his youth, and the stories of the battles of the Edain, and he remembered the words spoken for lost battles and failed hopes, and he spoke them in a voice grim and sharp-edged as a blade: "Thought shall be the harder, heart the keener, courage the greater, as our might lessens,"
"So be it," answered Ser Mandon Moore. He lowered his visor and raised his sword. Behind him burst a flood of Lannister crimson and King's Landing gold.
_______________________________________
Evening was lengthening, and the sun was going down in a blinding ball of deep red in the west, casting long red and gold fingers across the darkening sky. The shadows were long in the courtyard of the Red Keep.
Lannister red. Royal red. thought Cersei Lannister. She was Queen-Regent of the Eight Kingdoms, sovereign from Dorne to the Wall. She was supreme. She felt like she was in a dream, she was drifting on air, like a great weight was lifted from her shoulders, free at last of the anxiety and the worry that had consumed her for so long. She felt like the gods had answered her prayers.
Too long had she lived in fear. Too long had she feared her terrible ape of a husband, that drunk Robert Baratheon. Too long had her nights been sleepless for fear of Stannis Baratheon and what he might do to her children if he discovered the truth Cersei had hidden. Too long had she endured Jon Arryn's reproachful looks, and Ned Stark's icy gaze, and Isildur's terrible, piercing, burning eyes. No longer would she fear Robert's rage, or Stannis' justice, or Isildur's inhumanity. Her children were safe at last.
For a moment the dream had almost slipped away, one man had scorched her fingers even as she reached out to offer him a place beside her. Aratan Isildurion, the foolish Captain of the King's Host. Now he was in her power even as his friend Ned Stark was.
Cersei stood at the right hand of her son, King Joffrey, the First of His Name, King of the Andals, the First Men, the Rhoynar, and the Numenoreans, Lord of the Eight Kingdoms and Protector of the Realm. He was resplendent in gold, from the gold circlet over the curly gold locks of his hair to the golden shoes upon his feet, green eyes flashing clear and proud. Jaime's son. Her son. No Baratheon at all, no scion of that drunk fool Robert, but her son alone.
They stood in the courtyard of the Red Keep, the Tower of the Hand looming before them, surrounded by chivalry and bared swords. They were flanked by the Heirguard on the one side and the Kingsguard on the other. In heavy grey plate, with his dog's face helmet donned, the Hound stood by Joffrey, gauntleted hand on sword hilt. Behind them stood the retainers and livery men of House Lannister. Off to the side was Ser Ilyn Payne, mute and dreadful to look upon, clad in his harness of black plate and looking like Death himself.
Three members of their Small Council remained to them, and they too stood and waited outside of the Tower. Varys' plump hands were folded within his drooping sleeves, and his face was pale and sweat-beaded. Petyr Baelish, Master of Coin once more, was smirking as if he knew some private joke. Pycelle's arms were clasped over his long beard.
Cersei watched her men drag Ned Stark out of the Tower of the Hand. His head hung limply. His hair and beard had been cut and he was garbed in the black mail and surcoat of the Gondorians.
Two more came after him, and Cersei grimaced to see Aratan in the hands of her men. He could have been a strong ally, she was willing even to offer herself to him if it would bring Gondor's allegiance, but he would be a valuable captive too.
The three prisoners were left on their knees before the King of the Eight Kingdoms, and they swayed back and forth, breathing and saying nothing. Their eyes were cast down.
"They fought till utter exhaustion, Your Grace," said Ser Mandon Moore, helm held beneath his arm, sword still in hand, his hair plastered to his head by sweat.
"Well done, Ser Mandon," Cersei replied, with a perfect smile.
Joffrey strode forward from his mother's side, arms behind his back, and surveyed the three kneeling men. They did not meet his gaze. He smirked with satisfaction.
"Guards!" he called out. "Return Lord Stark to his chambers. I am sure he is weary from his labours,"
Perfect, Cersei thought, smiling still. She had told Joffrey very carefully and in no uncertain terms of the value that Lord Stark had as a captive. Ned Stark was the key to keeping the North in line. Stark as their prisoner would erase the shame of her idiot brother's capture and allow for peace with honour.
The guards seized Eddard by either shoulder and pulled him to his feet. Surrounded by four men, they led him back towards the dungeons. He turned a frozen stare in Cersei's direction, cold and disdainful. She felt an instinctive chill of fear down her back, but ignored it. He was in her power, completely and utterly.
"Now now," Joffrey said, looking over the two kneeling Numenoreans. "What ought to be done with these traitors?"
Joffrey had a cutting smile almost like Jaime, but there was something different about it. Something less merry, something sicker.
Cersei recognized that smile on her son's face. She knew it well. Cersei loved her children, loved them as neither Jaime nor Robert ever could, but when she saw her son smile that way even she wondered what sort of creature she had birthed. The Queen moved swiftly forward to Joffrey's side.
"My son," she whispered in his ear. "They should be taken prisoner as well,"
"What?" he shot back in a low voice, eyes angry and disgusted, and lip curling petulantly. "They have betrayed me! Their king!"
"So did Lord Stark, but like Stark they have value alive. Kill the other one if you wish, but Aratan is valuable to us,"
"Treason must be punished Mother, he should never have dared defy us!" Joffrey was still whispering, but his voice was growing louder, his tone wilder.
"Lock him away, my son, let his father ransom him, let Isildur know that his son's life is in our hands and he will never dare defy you," Cersei told him. Joff was silent for a moment, nostrils flaring in displeasure.
"Very well," he said at last, grudgingly.
Joffrey stepped away from his mother and said in a loud voice: "Aratan Isildurion!"
The Captain looked up and Cersei drew in a breath despite herself. Amongst the dark blood and the wounds of his face, his piercing eyes gleamed undaunted. He was so like unto his father, though his features were younger and his eyes more blue than grey. His hard stare hit like a blow to the chest, and Cersei wished for nothing more than to turn away from it. She forced herself to meet it. So stern was the son of Isildur's glance that in an instant she felt utterly exposed, helpless, like he had penetrated all her veils and defenses and knew every secret within her mind and heart. And all she could see in his look for her was pity and contempt.
"You have tried to free a man guilty of treason against the Crown, and you have slain many of my men in the doing. Have you anything to say in defense of yourself?" asked Joffrey, loud enough for all in the courtyard to hear, undaunted by the hardness of Aratan's glare.
There was a long moment of silence. The captive did not speak, he just continued to look at them, his eyes set in that unbearable, burning look.
"Well?" said Joffrey, impatiently.
Finally Aratan spoke, voice weary but strong: "What I did, I did not for myself but for the Realm,"
"The Realm?" repeated Joffrey, slowly. His fists were clenching, rage gathering. "The Realm!?"
"I AM the Realm!" he snarled, words echoing about the courtyard.
No one else spoke. The King drew in a deep breath, calming himself. He looked back at his mother. Cersei allowed herself a small smile to reassure him, and nodded.
"You have betrayed your King's trust, Aratan son of Isildur. No Captain of my Host are you fit to be. So long as I am King, treason shall never go unpunished!" Joffrey proclaimed, looking to the knights and soldiers gathered on all sides of them. The castle's servants had gathered in the courtyard, and the pages and squires, the septon, the heralds and courtiers, and all the nobility of the court, all watching the spectacle with pale faces and wide eyes.
"Yet it is said that mercy too is a kingly virtue!" Joff went on, words assured and strong. Cersei felt a wave of relief wash over her. Her son could be so unpredictable, sometimes he worried her.
"Aratan Isildurion, you shall be given to the Night's Watch, and there may you redeem your house's disgrace!"
Just the right command. Cersei thought, pleased with her son's decision. A promise to give Aratan to the Night's Watch let the King appear merciful but not weak, and he could be left in the castle dungeons as their prisoner for as long as they needed him.
"But first," Joffrey added, eyes gleaming. He stepped towards Aratan. Rings gleamed on his hands in the failing light.
"You will pay homage to your King, that all may see you repent for your crime. You, Aratan Isildurion, shall give unto me the kiss of peace,"
Joffrey offered his hand before the son of Isildur's face.
Aratan stared back, defiant. His glare burned like fire and cut like a blade. For a moment Joffrey took a half-step back, recoiling before the Numenorean, but he was willful and kept his hand held out, waiting for the kiss.
The evening breeze was tossing the banners upon the battlements. All eyes were fixed on Aratan and Joffrey, on the Captain and the King.
"You would refuse the mercy of a King?" said Joffrey finally, withdrawing his hand.
Then Aratan spoke again, and his words echoed off the walls and towers of the Red Keep: "Kingship is given to the House of Baratheon only, not to Joffrey son of Jaime!"
Cersei's heart stopped. Her blood felt as icy water.
There was a sound as over hundreds of people gasped in shock. Then a confused murmur ran through the gathered crowd. Cersei looked around desperately. She felt caught, exposed, trapped. She tried to compose her face into a mask, the mask she wore at Robert's feasts, but she could not help it. The fear was welling back up inside her.
Joffrey stepped back again, silent, but his features were contorted with wrath. His knuckles were white, his green eyes had gone wild.
"W-what did you say?" Joffrey said through his teeth. Then he screamed: "What did you say!?"
He looked around wildly, as if he did not know what to do. Aratan did not flinch before the raging boy-king, but stared on with his awful, unblinking, penetrating gaze. Cersei heard whispers behind her. She didn't know what to do.
Her son made the decision for her. He smirked with a bloodthirsty, wrathful glee as he said the words:
"Ser Ilyn, bring me his head!"
The King's Justice drew forth his longsword, three and a half feet of hard-edged heavy steel. At the King's command, he stalked forward. His blank face betrayed neither doubt nor feeling.
Aratan cried out for a third time, and his voice grew great and terrible to hear, a voice that was not his own, that was deeper and more powerful:
"King shall they call thee, Joffrey son of Jaime, and King shall thee be, but False King, craven king over thralls! Thy kingship shall be one of fire and blood! Thou shalt drown the land in death, and be drowned thyself in thy turn! Thou shalt gain thyself a new name, worthy of thy station: The King of Ashes shalt thee be called, for in ashes shalt thou leave thy kingdom, to be scattered by the eastern winds! All shall curse thy name, and curse thy line, and curse thy house, for after you shall come a greater king, terrible and awful in splendour, and so few will be left to stand before him!"
And none who heard these words could help but feel themselves pierce them unto their own hearts and minds. Aratan's eyes no longer stared at anyone, but were far off and remote and seemed to glow with a fire of their own. The King's Justice was bringing up his sword in both hands, but Aratan did not harken it. He was still yelling, his voice awful to hear:
"The black sails! The black sails!"
Somewhere, a horse was screaming in wild terror when Ser Ilyn Payne swung his sword down.