AryaFaint and far away the light burned, low on the horizon, shining
through the sea mists.
"It looks like a star," said Arya.
"The star of home," said Denyo.
His father was shouting orders. Sailors scrambled up and down the
three tall masts and moved along the rigging, reefing the heavy purple sails.
Below, oarsmen heaved and strained over two great banks of oars. The decks
tilted, creaking, as the galleas Titan's Daughter
heeled to starboard
and began to come about.
The star of home.
Arya stood at the prow, one hand resting on
the gilded figurehead, a maiden with a bowl of fruit. For half a heartbeat she
let herself pretend that it was her home ahead.
But that was stupid
. Her home was gone, her parents dead, and
all her brothers slain but Jon Snow on the Wall. That was where she had wanted
to go. She told
the captain as much, but even the iron coin did not sway
him. Arya never seemed to find the places she set out to reach. Yoren had sworn
to deliver her to Winterfell, only she had ended up in Harrenhal, and Yoren in
his grave. When she escaped Harrenhal for Riverrun, Lem and Anguy and Tom
o'Sevens took her captive and dragged her to the hollow hill instead. Then the
Hound had stolen her and dragged her to the Twins. Arya had left him dying by
the river and gone ahead to Saltpans, hoping to take passage for
Eastwatch-by-the-Sea, only…
Braavos might not be so bad. Syrio was from Braavos, and Jaqen
might be there as well.
It was Jaqen who had given her the iron coin. He
hadn't truly been her friend the way Syrio had, but what good had friends ever
done her? I don't need any friends so long as I have Needle.
She brushed
the ball of her thumb across the sword's smooth pommel, wishing, wishing
…
If truth be told, Arya did not know what to wish for any more than she
knew what awaited her beneath that distant light. The captain had given her
passage but he had no time to speak with her. Some of the crew shunned her, but
others gave her gifts-a silver fork, fingerless gloves, a floppy woolen hat
patched with leather. One man showed her how to tie sailors's knots. Another
poured her thimble cups of fire wine. The friendly ones would tap their chests,
repeating their names over and over until Arya said them back, though none ever
thought to ask her
name. They called her Salty since she'd come aboard
at Saltpans, near the mouth of the Trident. It was as good as name as any, she
supposed.
The last of the night's stars had vanished … all but the pair
dead ahead. "It's two
stars now."
"Two eyes," said Denyo. "The Titan sees us."
The Titan of Braavos.
Old Nan had told them stories of the
Titan back in Winterfell. He was a giant as tall as a mountain, and whenever
Braavos stood in danger he would wake with fire in his eyes, his rocky limbs
grinding and groaning as he waded out into the sea to smash the enemies. "The
Braavosi feed him on the juicy pink flesh of little highborn girls," Nan would
end, and Sansa would give a stupid squeak. But Maester Luwin said the Titan was
only a statue, and Old Nan's stories were only stories.
Winterfell is burned and fallen
, Arya reminded herself. Old Nan
and Maester Luwin were both dead, most like, and Sansa too. It did no good to
think of them. All men must die.
That was what the words meant, the
words that Jaqen H'ghar had taught her when he gave her the worn iron coin. She
had learned more Braavosi words since they left Saltpans, the words for
please
and thank you
and sea
and star
and fire
wine
, but she came to them knowing that all men must die
. Most of
the Daughter's
crew had a smattering of the Common Tongue from nights
ashore in Oldtown and King's Landing and Maidenpool, though only the captain
and his sons spoke it well enough to talk to her. Denyo was the youngest of
those sons, a plump, cheerful boy of twelve who kept his father's cabin and
helped his eldest brother do his sums.
"I hope your Titan isn't hungry," Arya told him.
"Hungry?" Denyo said, confused.
"It makes no matter. "Even if the Titan did eat juicy pink girl flesh,
Arya would not fear him. She was a scrawny thing, no proper meal for a giant,
and almost eleven, practically a woman grown. And Salty isn't highborn,
either.
"Is the Titan the god of Braavos?" she asked. "Or do you have the
Seven?"
"All gods are honored in Braavos." The captain's son loved to talk
about his city almost as much as he loved to talk about his father's ship.
"Your Seven have a sept here, the Sept-Beyond-the-Sea, but only Westerosi
sailors worship there."
They are not my Seven. They were my mother's gods, and they let the
Freys murder her at the Twins.
She wondered whether she would find a
godswood in Braavos, with a weirwood at its heart. Denyo might know, but she
could not ask him. Salty was from Saltpans, and what would a girl from Saltpans
know about the old gods of the north? The old gods are dead
, she told
herself, with Mother and Father and Robb and Bran and Rickon, all dead.
A long time ago, she remembered her father saying that when the cold winds
blow, the lone wolf dies and the pack survives. He had it all backward.
Arya, the lone wolf, still lived, but the wolves of the pack had been taken and
slain and skinned.
"The Moonsingers led us to this place of refuge, where the dragons of
Valyria could not find us," Denjo said. "Theirs is the greatest temple. We
esteem the Father of Waters as well, but his house is built anew whenever he
takes his bride. The rest of the gods dwell together on an isle in the center
of the city. That is where you will find the … the Many-Faced God."
The Titan's eyes seemed brighter now, and Farther apart. Arya did not
know any Many-Faced God, but if he answered prayers he might be the god she
sought. Ser Gregor
, she thought, Dunsen, Raff the Sweetling, Ser
Ilyn, Ser Meryn, Queen Cersei. Only six now.
Joffrey was dead, the Hound
had slain Polliver, and she'd stabbed the Tickler herself, and that stupid
squire with the pimple. I wouldn't have killed him if he hadn't grabbed
me.
The Hound had been dying when she left him on the banks of the Trident,
burning up with fever from his wound. I should have given him the gift of
mercy, and put a knife into his heart.
"Salty, look!" Denyo took her by the arm and turned her. "Can you see?
There.
" He pointed.
The mists gave way before them, ragged gray curtains parted by their
prow. The Titan's Daughter
cleaved through the gray-green waters on
billowing purple wings. Arya could hear the cries of seabirds overhead. There
where Denyo pointed, a line of stony ridges rose sudden from the sea, their
steep slopes covered with soldier pines and black spruce. But dead ahead the
sea had broken through, and there above the open water the Titan towered, with
his eyes blazing and his long green hair blowing in the wind.
His legs bestrode the gap, one foot planted on each mountain, his
shoulders looming tall above the jagged crests. His legs were carved of solid
stone, the same black granite as the sea monts on which he stood, though around
his hips he wore an armored skirt of greenish bronze. His breastplate was
bronze as well, and his head in his crested half-helm. His blowing hair was
made of hempen ropes dyed green, and huge fire burned in the caves that were
his eyes. One hand rested atop the ridge to his left, bronze fingers coiled
about a knob of stone; the other thrust up into the air, clasping the hilt of a
broken sword.
He is only a little bigger than King Baelor's statue in King's
Landing
, she told herself when they were still well off to sea. As the
galleas drove closer to where the breakers smashed against the ridgeline,
however, the Titan grew larger still. She could hear Denyo's father bellowing
commands in his deep voice, and up in the rigging men were bringing in the
sails. We are going to row beneath the Titan's legs.
Arya could see the
arrow slits in the great bronze breastplate, and stains and speckles on the
Titan's arms and shoulders where the seabirds nested. Her neck craned upward.
Baelor the Blessed would not reach his knee. He could step right over the
walls of Winterfell.
Then the Titan gave a mighty roar.
The sound was as huge as he was, a terrible groaning and grinding so
loud it drowned out even the captain's voice and the crash of the waves against
those pineclad ridges. A thousand seabirds took to the air at once, and Arya
flinched until she saw that Denyo was laughing. "He warns the Arsenal of our
coming, that is all," he shouted. "You must not be afraid."
"I never was
," Arya shouted back. "It was loud, is all."
Wind and wave had the Titan's Daughter
hard in hand now,
driving her swiftly toward the channel. Her double bank of oars stroked
smoothly, lashing the sea to white foam as the Titan's shadow fell upon them.
For a moment it seemed as though they must surely smash up against the stones
beneath his legs. Huddled by Denyo at the prow, Arya could taste salt where the
spray had touched her face. She had to look straight up to see the Titan's
head. "The Braavosi feed him on the juicy pink flesh of little highborn girls,"
she heard Old Nan say again, but she was not a little girl, and she would not
be frightened of a stupid statue
.
Even so, she kept one hand on Needle as they slipped between his legs.
More arrow slits dotted the insides of those great stone thighs, and when Arya
gazed up to watch the crow's nest slip through with a good ten yards to spare,
she spied murder holes beneath the Titan's armored skirts, and pale faces
staring down at them from behind the iron bars.
And then they were past.
The shadow lifted, the pineclad ridges fell away to either side, the
winds dwindled, and they found themselves moving through a great lagoon. Ahead
rose another sea mont, a knob of rock that pushed up from the water like a
spiked fist, its stony battlements bristling with scorpions, spitfires, and
trebuchets. "The Arsenal of Braavos," Denyo named it, as proud as if he'd built
it. "They can build a war galley there in a day. " Arya could see dozens of
galleys tied up at quays and perched on launching slips. The painted prows of
others poked from innumerable wooden sheds along the stony shores, like hounds
in a kennel, lean and mean and hungry, waiting for a hunter's horn to call them
forth. She tried to count them, but there were too many, and more docks and
sheds and quays where the shoreline curved away.
Two galleys had come out to meet them. They seemed to skim upon the
water like dragonflies, their pale oars flashing. Arya heard the captain
shouting to them and their own captains shouting back, but she did not
understand the words. A great horn sounded. The galleys passed to either side
of them, so close that she could hear the muffled sound of drums from within
their purple hulls, bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom, like the beat of living
hearts.
Then the galleys were behind them, and the Arsensal as well. Ahead
stretched a broad expanse of pea green water rippled like a sheet of colored
glass. From its wet heart arose the city proper, a great sprawl of domes and
towers and bridges, gray and gold and red. The hundred isles of Braavos in
the sea.
Maester Luwin had taught them about Braavos, but Arya had forgotten
much of what he'd said. It was a flat city, she could see that even from afar,
not like King's Landing on its three high hills. The only hills here were the
ones that men had raised of brick and granite, bronze and marble. Something
else was missing as well, though it took her a few moments to realize what it
was. The city has no walls.
But when she said as much to Denyo, he
laughed at her. "Our walls are made of wood, and painted purple," he told her.
"Our galleys
are our walls. We need no other."
The deck creaked behind them. Arya turned to find Denyo's father
looming over them in his long captain's coat of purple wool. Tradesman-Captain
Ternesio Terys wore no whiskers and kept his gray hair cut short and neat,
framing his square, windburned face. On the crossing she had oft seen him
jesting with his crew, but when he frowned men ran from him as if before a
storm. He was frowning now. "Our voyage is at an end," he told Arya. "We make
for the Chequy Port, where the Sealord's customs officers will come aboard to
inspect our holds. They will be half a day at it, they always are, but there is
no need for you to wait upon their pleasure. Gather your belongings. I shall
lower a boat, and Yorko will put you ashore."
Ashore.
Arya bit her lip. She had crossed the narrow sea to get
here, but if the captain had asked she would have told him she wanted to stay
aboard the Titan's Daughter
. Salty was too small to man an oar, she knew
that now, but she could learn to splice ropes and reef the sails and steer a
course across the great salt seas. Denyo had taken her up to the crow's nest
once, and she hadn't been afraid at all, though the deck had seemed a tiny
thing below her. I can do sums too, and keep a cabin neat.
But the galleas had no need of a second boy. Besides, she had only to
look at the captain's face to know how anxious he was to be rid of her. So Arya
just nodded. "Ashore," she said, though ashore meant only strangers.
"Valar dohaeris.
" He touched two fingers to his brow. "I beg
you remember Ternesio Terys and the service he has done you."
"I will," Arya said in a small voice. The wind tugged at her cloak,
insistent as a ghost. It was time she was away.
Gather up your belongings
, the captain had said, but there were
few enough of those. Only the clothes she was wearing, her little pouch of
coins, the gifts the crew had given her, the dagger on her left hip, and Needle
on her right.
The boat was ready before she was, and Yorko was at the oars. He was
the captain's son as well, but older than Denyo and less friendly. I never
said farewell to Denyo
, she thought, as she clambered down to join him. She
wondered if she would ever see the boy again. I should have said
farewell.
The Titan's Daughter
dwindled in their wake while the city grew
larger with every stroke of Yorko's oars. A harbor was visible off to her
right, a tangle of piers and quays crowded with big-bellied whalers out of
Ibben, swan ships from the Summer Isles, and more galleys than a girl could
count. Another harbor, more distant, was off to her left, beyond a sinking
point of land where the tops of half-drowned buildings thrust their tops above
the water. Arya had never seen so many big buildings all together in one place.
King's Landing had the Red Keep and the Great Sept of Baelor and the Dragonpit,
but Braavos seemed to boast a score of temples and towers and palaces that were
as large or even larger. I will be a mouse again
, she thought glumly,
the way I was in Harrenhal before I ran away.
The city had seemed like one big island from where the Titan stood,
but as Yorko rowed them closer she saw that it was many small islands close
together, linked by arched stone bridges that spanned innumerable canals.
Beyond the harbor she glimpsed streets of gray stone houses, built so close
they leaned one upon the other. To Arya's eyes they were queer looking, four
and five stories tall and very skinny, with sharp-peaked tile roofs like
pointed hats. She saw no thatch, and only a few timbered houses of the sort she
knew in Westeros. They have no trees
, she realized. Braavos is all
stone, a gray city in a green sea.
Yorko swung them north of the docks, and down the gullet of a great
canal, a broad green waterway that ran straight into the heart of the city.
They passed under the arches of a carved stone bridge, decorated with half a
hundred kinds of fish and crabs and squids. A second bridge appeared ahead,
this one carved in lacy leafy vines, and beyond that a third, that looked at
them from a thousand painted eyes. The mouths of lesser canals opened to either
side, and others still smaller off those. Some of the houses were built
above
the waterways, she saw, turning the canals into a sort of tunnel.
Slender boats slid in and out among them, wrought in the shapes of water
serpents with painted heads and upraised tails. Those were not rowed but poled,
she saw, by men who stood at their sterns in cloaks of gray and brown and deep
moss green. She saw huge flat-bottomed barges too, heaped high with crates and
barrels and pushed along by twenty polemen to a side, and fancy floating houses
with lanterns of colored glass, velvet drapes, and brazen figureheads. Off in
the far distance, looming above canals and houses both, was a massive gray
stone roadway of some kind, supported by three tiers of mighty arches marching
away south into the haze. "What's that? " Arya asked Yorko, pointing. "The
sweetwater river," he told her. "It brings freshwater from the mainland, across
the mudflats and the briny shallows. Good sweet water for the fountains."
When she looked behind her, the harbor and lagoon were lost to sight.
Ahead, a row of mighty statues stood along both sides of the channel, solemn
stone men in long bronze robes, spattered with the droppings of the seabirds.
Some held books, some daggers, some hammers. One clutched a golden star in his
upraised hand. Another was upending a stone flagon to send an endless stream of
water splashing down into the canal. "Are they gods? " asked Arya.
"Sealords," said Yorko. "The Isle of the Gods is farther on. See? Six
bridges down, on the right bank. That is the Temple of the Moonsingers."
It was one of those that Arya had spied from the lagoon, a mighty mass
of snow white marble topped by a huge silvered dome whose milk-glass windows
showed all the phases of the moon. A pair of marble maidens flanked its gates,
tall as the Sealords, supporting a crescent-shaped lintel.
Beyond it stood another temple, a red stone edifice as stern as any
fortress. Atop its great square tower a fire blazed in an iron brazier twenty
feet across, whilst smaller fires flanked its brazen doors. "The red priests
love their fires," Yorko told her. "The Lord of Light is their god, red
R'hllor."
I know.
Arya remembered Thoros of Myr in his bits of old armor,
worn over robes so faded that he had seemed more a pink priest than a red one.
Yet his kiss had brought Lord Beric back from death. She watched the Red God's
house drift by, wondering whether these Braavosi priests of his could do the
same.
Next came a huge brick structure festooned with lichen. Arya might
have taken it for a storehouse had not Yorko said, "That is the Holy Refuge,
where we honor the small gods the world has forgotten. You will hear it called
the Warren too. " A small canal ran between the Warren's looming lichen-covered
walls, and there he swung them right. They passed through a tunnel and out
again into the light. More shrines loomed up to either side.
"I never knew there were so many gods," Arya said.
Yorko grunted. They went around a bend and beneath another bridge. On
their left appeared a rocky knoll with a windowless temple of dark gray stone
at its top. A flight of stone steps led from its doors down to a covered
dock.
Yorko backed the oars, and the boat bumped gently against stone
pilings. He grasped an iron ring set to hold them for a moment. "Here I leave
you."
The dock was shadowed, the steps steep. The temple's black tile roof
came to a sharp peak, like the houses along the canals. Arya chewed her lip.
Syrio came from Braavos. He might have visited this temple. He might have
climbed those steps.
She grabbed a ring and pulled herself up onto the
dock.
"You know my name," said Yorko from the boat.
"Yorko Terys."
"Valar dohaeris.
" He pushed off with his oar and drifted back
off into the deeper water. Arya watched him row back the way they'd come, until
he vanished in the shadows of the bridge. As the swish of oars faded, she could
almost hear the beating of her heart. Suddenly she was somewhere else…
back in Harrenhal with Gendry, maybe, or with the Hound in the woods along the
Trident. Salty is a stupid child
, she told herself. I am a wolf, and
will not be afraid.
She patted Needle's hilt for luck and plunged into the
shadows, taking the steps two at a time so no one could ever say she'd been
afraid.
At the top she found a set of carved wooden doors twelve feet high.
The left hand door was made of weirwood pale as bone, the right of gleaming
ebony. In their center was a carved moon face; ebony on the weirwood side,
weirwood on the ebony. The look of it reminded her somehow of the heart tree in
the godswood at Winterfell. The doors are watching me
, she thought. She
pushed upon both doors at once with the flat of her gloved hands, but neither
one would budge. Locked and barred.
"Let me in, you stupid," she said.
"I crossed the narrow sea." She made a fist and pounded. "Jaqen told me to
come. I have the iron coin. "She pulled it from her pouch and held it up. "See?
Valar morghulis.
"
The doors made no reply, except to open.
They opened inward all in silence, with no human hand to move them.
Arya took a step forward, and another. The doors closed behind her, and for a
moment she was blind. Needle was in her hand, though she did not remember
drawing it.
A few candles burned along the walls but gave so little light that
Arya could not see her own feet. Someone was whispering, but too softly for her
to make out words. Someone else was weeping. She heard light footfalls, leather
sliding over stone, a door opening and closing. Water, I hear water too.
Slowly her eyes adjusted. The temple seemed much larger within than it
had without. The septs of Westeros were seven-sided, with seven altars for the
seven gods, but here there were more gods than seven. Statues of them stood
along the walls, massive and threatening. Around their feet red candles
flickered, as dim as distant stars. The nearest was a marble woman twelve feet
tall. Real tears were trickling from her eyes, to fill the bowl she cradled in
her arms. Beyond her was a man with a lion's head seated on a throne, carved of
ebony. On the other side of the doors a huge horse of bronze and iron reared up
on two great legs. Farther on she could make out a great stone face, a pale
infant with a sword, a shaggy black goat the size of an aurochs, a hooded man
leaning on a staff. The rest were only looming shapes to her, halfseen through
the gloom. Between the gods were hidden alcoves thick with shadows, with here
and there a candle burning.
Silent as a shadow, Arya moved between rows of long stone benches, her
sword in hand. The floor was made of stone, her feet told her; not polished
marble like the floor of the Great Sept of Baelor, but something rougher. She
passed some women whispering together. The air was warm and heavy, so heavy
that she yawned. She could smell the candles. The scent was unfamiliar, and she
put it down to some queer incense … but as she got deeper into the
temple, they seemed to smell of snow and pine needles and hot stew. Good
smells
, Arya told herself, and felt a little braver. Brave enough to slip
Needle back into its sheath.
In the center of the temple she found the water she had heard-a pool
ten feet across, black as ink and lit by dim red candles. Beside it sat a young
man in a silvery cloak, weeping softly. She watched him dip a hand in the
water, sending scarlet ripples racing across the pool. When he drew his fingers
back he sucked them, one by one. He must be thirsty.
There were stone
cups along the rim of the pool. Arya filled one and brought it to him, so he
could drink. The young man stared at her for a long moment when she offered it
to him. "Valar morghulis
," he said. "Valar dohaeris
," she
replied.
He drank deep, and dropped the cup into the pool with a soft
plop
. Then he pushed himself to his feet, swaying, holding his belly.
For a moment Arya thought he was going to fall. It was only then that she saw
the dark stain below his belt, spreading as she watched. "You're stabbed," she
blurted out, but the man paid her no mind. He lurched unsteadily toward the
wall, and crawled into an alcove onto a hard stone bed. When Arya peered
around, she saw other alcoves too. On some there were old people sleeping.
No
, a half-remembered voice seemed to whisper in her head.
They are dead, or dying. Look with your eyes.
A hand touched her arm.
Arya spun away, but it was only a little girl: a pale little girl in a
cowled robe that seemed to engulf her, black on the right side and white on the
left. Beneath the cowl was a gaunt and bony face, hollow cheeks, and dark eyes
that looked as big as saucers. "Don't grab me," Arya warned the waif. "I killed
the boy who grabbed me last."
The girl said some words that Arya did not know.
She shook her head. "Don't you know the Common Tongue?"
A voice behind her said, "I do."
Arya did not like the way they kept surprising her. The hooded man was
tall, enveloped in a larger version of the black-and-white robes the girl was
wearing. Beneath his cowl all she could see was the faint red glitter of
candlelight reflecting off his eyes. "What place is this?" she asked him.
"A place of peace." His voice was gentle. "You are safe here. This is
the House of Black and White, my child. Though you are young to seek the favor
of the Many-Faced God."
"Is he like the southron god, the one with seven faces?"
"Seven? No. He has faces beyond count, little one, as many faces as
there are stars in the sky. In Braavos, men worship as they will … but at
the end of every road stands Him of Many Faces, waiting. He will be there for
you one day, do not fear. You need not rush to his embrace."
"I only came to find Jaqen H'ghar."
"I do not know this name."
Her heart sank. "He was from Lorath. His hair was white on one side
and red on the other. He said he'd teach me secrets, and gave me this. " The
iron coin was clutched in her fist. When she opened her fingers, it clung to
her sweaty palm.
The priest studied the coin, though he made no move to touch it. The
waif with the big eyes was looking at it too. Finally the cowled man said,
"Tell me your name, child."
"Salty. I come from Saltpans, by the Trident."
Though she could not see his face, somehow she could feel him smiling.
"No," he said. "Tell me your name."
"Squab," she answered this time.
"Your true name, child."
"My mother named me Nan, but they call me Weasel--"
"Your name."
She swallowed. "Arry. I'm Arry."
"Closer. And now the truth?"
Fear cuts deeper than swords
, she told herself. "Arya." She
whispered the word the first time. The second time she threw it at him. "I am
Arya
, of House Stark."
"You are," he said, "but the House of Black and White is no place for
Arya, of House Stark."
"Please," she said. "I have no place to go."
"Do you fear death?"
"No." She bit her lip.
"Let us see." The priest lowered his cowl. Beneath he had no face;
only a yellowed skull with a few scraps of skin still clinging to the cheeks,
and a white worm wriggling from one empty eye socket. "Kiss me, child," he
croaked, in a voice as dry and husky as a death rattle.
Does he think to scare me?
Arya kissed him where his nose
should have been and plucked the grave worm from his eye to eat it, but it
melted like a shadow in her hand.
The yellow skull was melting too, and the kindliest old man she had
ever seen was smiling down at her. "No one has ever tried to eat my worm
before," he said. "You must be hungry, child."
Yes
, she thought, but not for food.