Nor was Lord Dalton the only problem on the sea. The dissolution of the Kingdom of the Three Daughters was proceeding apace. When Lys and Myr went to war, Tyrosh seized the opportunity to assert its dominion over the Stepstones. To press that claim, the Archon of Tyrosh called up Racallio Ryndoon, the flamboyant captain-general who had once commanded the Triarchy’s forces against Daemon Targaryen. Racallio overran the islands in a trice and put the reigning King of the Narrow Sea to death … then claimed the crown for himself, betraying the Archon and his native city. The confused four-sided war that followed had the effect of closing the southern end of the narrow sea to trade, cutting off King’s Landing, Duskendale, Maidenpool, and Gulltown from commerce with the east. Pentos, Braavos, and Lorath were similarly affected, and sent envoys to King’s Landing in hopes of bringing the Iron Throne into an alliance against Racallio and the quarrelsome Daughters. But this proposal was rejected by Ser Tyland Lannister.
Racallio Ryndoon was a colorful figure who became the subject of both scholarly study and vulgar tales. He was a hulking man, able to wield a sword with either hand, and frequently fought with two blades. In battle, he would often laugh and was sometimes known to break out in bawdy song.
No one can deny that he lived a life of extremes: extreme ambition, extreme gluttony, extreme lusts … and extreme generosity. Though he hailed from Tyrosh—a Free City infamous for its slavers—he hated slavery and freed the enslaved wherever he found them. He had many wives, but was also known to sometimes dress in women’s clothing.
Racallio Ryndoon
FRANCESCA BAERALD
There were problems within the walls of King’s Landing as well. Of greatest concern were the king himself—and his queen. Both were observed to be strangely joyless children. Jaehaera was oddly immature for a child of eight, and Aegon showed almost no interest in conversation or indeed any interaction with anyone—and he had a powerful aversion to the last living dragons. The king’s only friend at this time was the bastard boy, Gaemon Palehair. Grand Maester Munkun could find nothing that entertained or diverted him, and feared that the king had died on the inside.
A lesser problem was discovered early in 132 AC, when Grand Maester Orwyle was located. He had shaved his head and beard and hidden himself in a brothel, where he earned his bread by sweeping, scrubbing, and inspecting the patrons for pox. His mistake had been to teach some of the prostitutes to read, which drew suspicion and led to his unveiling. Many called for his immediate execution as an oathbreaker. But Ser Tyland—apparently feeling some loyalty to a fellow member of the former green council—noted that there was no King’s Justice yet and that, as a blind man, he was a poor choice to swing the sword himself. Using that for his pretext, the Hand instead confined Orwyle to a tower cell (large, airy, and far too comfortable, some charged) until such time as a suitable headsman could be found. The former Grand Maester was even provided with quill, ink, and parchment, so that he might continue his confessions. And so he did for the best part of two years, setting down the lengthy history of the reigns of Viserys I and Aegon II that would later prove to be such an invaluable source for his successor’s True Telling.
Meanwhile, in the Vale, bands of wildlings from the Mountains of the Moon descended upon the Vale of Arryn in large numbers to raid and plunder, summoning Lady Jeyne back to the Eyrie, while in Dorne, the ascension of a bellicose young princess, Aliandra Martell, drew Lord Royce Caron back to the Dornish Marches to deal with the many raiders hoping to win her hand with their daring. This left only five regents—chief of whom was Lord Corlys Velaryon. He was the only regent that King Aegon seemed to trust, but on the sixth day of the third moon of 132 AC, he collapsed while climbing the Red Keep’s serpentine steps and died before the Grand Maester could aid him.
Lord Corlys’s remains were taken to Driftmark on a ship commanded by Marilda of Hull, with her son Alyn at her side. The Sea Snake was buried at sea aboard the ancient Sea Snake—the famous vessel that had carried him to the ends of the earth and had won him his moniker. But with his passing, the succession to the rule of Driftmark and House Velaryon was suddenly an open question. Though Alyn Velaryon had been Corlys’s own choice as his successor, Alyn was a bastard—so four men came to court to stake their claim. Ser Malentine and Ser Rhogar Velaryon were the sons of one of Corlys’s younger brothers, and Daemion and Daeron Velaryon were the sons of Ser Vaemond Velaryon, who had lost his head years earlier for the temerity of naming Rhaenyra’s son Lucerys a bastard. The former two—tongueless for having repeated in Viserys’s hearing the same claims—took their rejection by the Hand and the council of regents poorly and tried to murder Alyn at Driftmark; they were thwarted only by the loyalty of House Velaryon’s guards. The latter two accepted the decision and reconciled with Alyn, receiving lands on Driftmark.
Once Alyn was formally installed as Lord of the Tides and Master of Driftmark, he offered to take the place of his grandsire (or sire, as the case may be) on the regency council. He was all of sixteen, however, so was sent back to Driftmark with Ser Tyland’s thanks. Instead, the regents added Unwin Peake—Lord of Starpike, Dunstonbury, and Whitegrove—to their number.
The Sea Snake’s funeral.
FRANCISCO VEGAS
Lord Corlys’s death also underscored another issue—that all men must die. Should anything befall Aegon III, the succession had to be determined. Queen Jaehaera’s claim was as good as Aegon’s—or perhaps even stronger—but she was a girl, and moreover one with a sweet, simple, and easily frightened demeanor. That left the popular sixteen-year-old daughters of Prince Daemon and Lady Laena Velaryon: Baela and Rhaena.
Their sex prevented them from being Aegon’s heirs, but the thoughts of the council swiftly turned to the disposition of their maidenheads. Baela, who had been first from her mother’s womb, was a spirited young woman who delighted in conduct unbecoming of a highborn maiden, including riding in midnight horse races, drinking with the City Watch in their garrison, and befriending men and women of low station. So the Hand and the council determined to marry her to Thaddeus Rowan, the Lord of Goldengrove, who was in search of a third wife after the death of his second a year earlier. Lord Thaddeus was well-liked and respected, and had fought for Queen Rhaenyra in the Dance. Also, the fact that all Lord Rowan’s offspring were male counted heavily in his favor; if he were to father a son with Lady Baela, Aegon III would have a clear successor. But he was also forty years Baela’s elder, bald and big-bellied.
Baela indignantly refused the match—and when the Hand had her confined to her rooms, she escaped by climbing out a window, swapping clothing with a washerwoman, and making her way to the docks, where a fisherman delivered her to Driftmark. A fortnight later, she and Lord Alyn Velaryon were wed. Some of the regents objected, demanding an annulment, but Ser Tyland chose to accept the marriage—and, in fact, had it put about that the union had been arranged by king and court. Lord Thaddeus’s wounded pride was assuaged by the hand of Floris Baratheon, the prettiest of Lord Borros’s daughters. (Unfortunately for Floris, she would die in childbed two years later.)
Ser Tyland then turned to the disposition of Lady Rhaena’s hand, and this time the council made certain that Rhaena herself was a part of the discussion. Rhaena was more tractable than her sister, and much more agreeable to the idea of an arranged marriage—and when asked if she had any preferences, she named Ser Corwyn Corbray, whom she had grown fond of while she was a ward of Lady Jeyne in the Vale. The younger brother of Lord Leowyn, Corwyn was thirty-two years old, already a widower with two daughters, and a knight of splendid repute whose father had granted him Lady Forlorn, the ancestral Valyrian steel sword of the Corbrays. As the match seemed eminently suitable, the council agreed. The betrothal was announced, and a fortnight later the two were wed. (The regents felt it prudent for Rhaena to wed quickly, in case her sister was already with child.)
Baela’s escape.
DIEGO GISBERT LLORENS
But later that year, celebrations of marriage turned to thoughts of death, as the Winter Fever came to the Seven Kingdoms. It first swept the Three Sisters, killing half the population of Sisterton. Whalers from the Port of Ibben were blamed and slaughtered, but to no avail. The disease then crossed the Bite to White Harbor, and thousands died—including Lord Desmond Manderly and his heir Ser Medrick. Ser Torrhen then became Lord of White Harbor and gave up his place on the council of regents, reducing their number to four.
The Winter of Widows was what the Citadel would call that season. So many lords died that more women than ever ruled—either in their own right, or in the name of their dead husbands, brothers, or fathers. In the period from 132 AC to early 133 AC, however, four such women were especially notable. Foremost of these was Lady Johanna, the widow of Casterly Rock, who ruled the domains of House Lannister for her young son, Lord Loreon. She had appealed time and time again to Aegon III’s Hand, her late lord husband’s twin, for aid against the reavers, but none had been forthcoming. Desperate to protect her people, Lady Johanna at last donned a man’s mail to lead the men of Lannisport and Casterly Rock against the foe. The songs tell of how she slew a dozen ironmen beneath the walls of Kayce, but those may be safely put aside as the work of drunken singers; Johanna carried a banner into battle, not a sword. Her courage did help inspire her westermen, however, for the raiders were soon routed and Kayce was saved.
There were two other noteworthy marriages in 132 AC. The first was that of Alysanne Blackwood to Lord Cregan Stark, at Winterfell. The wedding was said to be splendid, and Black Aly and her wolf pledged their troth before the heart tree in Winterfell’s icy godswood.
The second was that of Lady Elenda Baratheon, the widow of Lord Borros. With Princess Aliandra’s Dornishmen making more and more incursions into the stormlands, she decided to wed Ser Steffon Connington, the second son of the Lord of Griffin’s Roost. He was twenty years younger than she, but he was brave and fierce—a proven fighter who could help defend the stormlands against such threats.
Lady Sharis Footly, the widow of Tumbleton, achieved a different sort of fame by her efforts to restore that shattered town. Ruling in the name of her infant son (half a year after the second Battle of Tumbleton, she had given birth to a lusty darkhaired boy whom she proclaimed her late lord husband’s trueborn heir, though it was far more likely that the boy had been sired by Bold Jon Roxton), Lady Sharis pulled down the burned shells of shops and houses, rebuilt the town walls, buried the dead, planted wheat and barley and turnips in the fields where the camps had been, and even had the heads of the dragons Seasmoke and Vermithor cleaned and mounted and displayed in the town square, where travelers paid good coin to view them.
In Oldtown, relations between the High Septon and Lord Ormund’s widow, the Lady Sam, continued to worsen when she ignored His High Holiness’s command to remove herself from her stepson’s bed and take vows as a silent sister as penance for her sins. So the High Septon condemned the Dowager Lady of Oldtown as a shameless fornicator and forbade her to set foot in the Starry Sept until she had repented and sought forgiveness. Instead Lady Sam mounted a warhorse and burst into the sept as His High Holiness was leading a prayer. When he demanded to know her purpose, Lady Sam replied that while he had forbidden her to set foot in the sept, he had said naught about her horse’s hooves. Then she commanded her knights to bar the doors; if the sept was closed to her, it would be closed to all. Though he quaked and thundered, in the end the High Septon had no choice but to relent.
Finally, there was Alys, the “witch queen” of Harrenhal. When last the histories mentioned Alys, she had been with child by Prince Aemond One-Eye. Now she ruled a Harrenhal filled with broken men, robber knights, outlaws, and their followers, so the Hand dispatched Ser Regis Groves of the Kingsguard to purge the castle of the dregs that filled it and reclaim it for the realm. Regis and his escort were joined by Ser Damon Darry with a small troop of Darry men. At Harrenhal, Alys Rivers presented her son, whom she claimed was Aemond’s trueborn heir and thus the rightful King of Westeros. When Ser Regis refused to bend the knee to this infant king, Alys raised a hand and his head exploded. Some claim that her gesture was magic, and others that she was signaling an archer or slinger. What is known is that, after his death, a company of riders burst out from the castle. Ser Damon and thirty-two of his men were all that survived of the hundred that had set out.
Alys Rivers at Harrenhal.
SVEN SAUER WITH IGOR POSAVEC
The council disregarded the tales of Alys’s sorcery, and all agreed that a larger force must be sent to retake Harrenhal. But any plans for the assault were delayed when, on the third day of 133 AC, the Winter Fever reached King’s Landing. Victims of this ailment were first recognized by the flush of their skin, and then a slowly rising fever that, by the fourth day, either killed them or broke. The maesters tried all they could to improve the survival of those struck with the Winter Fever, but all they could do was slow its course. Only a quarter of those who contracted it survived, making it the worst pestilence since the Shivers in the reign of Jaehaerys the Conciliator.
All efforts to keep the sickness out of the Red Keep itself failed. Grand Maester Munkun was one of the few to survive the illness, but it took Ser Willis Fell, Lord Protector Leowyn Corbray, the Commander of the City Watch, two of Queen Jaehaera’s maids, and Lord Roland Westerling. Only one death was a mercy: that of the Dowager Queen Alicent, a prisoner ever since the war had ended. She had grown increasingly unhinged in her confinement, so for her death came as a welcome relief.
During this time of terrible suffering, two heroes appeared. The first was Orwyle, who had been freed to practice his arts as a maester because so many of the others had been struck down by the fever. Though he had no more luck than his predecessors in treating the illness, he worked tirelessly to try to ease the suffering of the stricken. The other was King Aegon, who spent his days visiting the sick and often sat with them for hours, sometimes holding their hands in his own, or soothing their brows with cool, damp cloths. Though His Grace seldom spoke, he shared his silences with them, and listened as they told him stories of their lives, begged him for forgiveness, or boasted of conquests, kindnesses, and children. Most of those he visited died, but those who lived would afterward attribute their survival to the touch of the king’s “healing hands.”
The last bedside Aegon visited was that of Ser Tyland Lannister. Through the city’s darkest days, Ser Tyland had remained in the Tower of the Hand, hard at work. But as cruel fate would have it, when the worst was past and new cases of the Winter Fever had dropped away to almost nothing, Ser Tyland succumbed. The fever took his life in two days instead of the usual four. Septon Eustace was with him when he died, as was the boy king that he had served. Aegon took his hand as he breathed his last.
Ser Tyland Lannister had never been beloved. The veil he wore to conceal his disfigured face gave rise to the tale that the visage underneath was monstrous and evil. By moving three-quarters of the Crown’s gold from King’s Landing while Aegon II’s master of coin, Tyland Lannister had sown the seeds of Queen Rhaenyra’s downfall—a stroke of cunning that would in the end cost him his eyes, ears, and health, and cost the queen her throne and her very life. Yet it must be said that he served Rhaenyra’s son well and faithfully as Hand.
The healing hands of Aegon III.
JOE SLUCHER
Investiture of the Kingsguard.
WOUTER FLORUSSE
IN THE AFTERMATH of the Winter Fever and the death of his Hand, King Aegon—not yet thirteen—finally asserted himself. He passed over Ser Marston Waters as Lord Commander of the Kingsguard, instead naming Ser Robin Massey and Ser Robert Darklyn to the order and making Massey Lord Commander. He also named Lord Thaddeus Rowan as Hand of the King and Lord Alyn Velaryon his admiral.
However, the three remaining regents—Lord Unwin Peake, Lord Manfryd Mooton, and Grand Maester Munkun—felt that they should have been consulted. Lord Mooton, still recovering from a brush with the Winter Fever, hoped to wait for the return of Lady Jeyne Arryn and Lord Royce Caron, but Lord Unwin declared that they had given up their places on the council and then proceeded to set aside the appointments the king had made.
The council made quite different choices from their monarch, for the most part. Ser Marston became Lord Commander of the Kingsguard, Darklyn and Massey were stripped of their cloaks, and Lord Unwin’s nephew, Ser Amaury Peake of Starpike, and his bastard brother, Ser Mervyn Flowers, were named in their place. Grand Maester Orwyle was returned to his cell, and Alyn Velaryon was stripped of his office. Instead, Lord Thaddeus Rowan accepted a place on the council of regents—as well as the office of justiciar and master of laws. Most importantly, Lord Unwin was made both Protector of the Realm and Hand of the King.
In response to being thus overruled, King Aegon III retreated back into silence and passivity. For much of the rest of his minority, King Aegon III played little part in the rule of the realm, merely fixing his signature and seal to any documents put before him. He remained a distant and remote figure even in his own castle, while the true power of the realm was vested in Lord Unwin, the scion of an ancient and illustrious family that had its origins in the First Men and the Age of Heroes.
House Peake was once one of the foremost houses in the Reach, but since the arrival of Aegon the Conqueror, it had begun a slow decline in prestige and wealth. Lord Unwin meant to change that from his now-lofty position. Besides placing kinsmen in the Kingsguard, he secured more offices for friends, allies, and followers. The City Watch’s ranks were replenished with five hundred of his own men, and its commander was Ser Lucas Leygood, son of one of the Caltrops who had plotted with him at Tumbleton. An aunt was placed in charge of Queen Jaehaera’s household. Starpike’s master-at-arms, Ser Gareth Long, was given that same office at the Red Keep, and Lord Unwin’s fellow Caltrops George Graceford, Lord of Holyhall, and Ser Victor Risley, the Knight of Risley Glade, were appointed as lord confessor and the King’s Justice. Even Septon Eustace was replaced in favor of Septon Bernard, a distant kinsman.
Under Ser Gareth Long’s tutelage, King Aegon was expected to acquire the skills of a knight. However, Long was a notoriously harsh taskmaster, and when he could not mete out his usual punishments to the royal person, he found an alternative. With Lord Unwin’s permission, he had Gaemon Palehair—the king’s only friend—appointed as Aegon’s whipping boy, receiving all the punishments that Long wished to inflict on the king. Gaemon’s tears and blood led to a marked improvement in the king’s skills, but hatred for the master-at-arms bloomed in the king’s heart.
Unwin surrounded himself with his own personal guard: ten richly paid sellswords called the Fingers, led by a Volantene named Tessario the Tiger for the tiger stripes tattooed across his face and back, which marked him as a former slave soldier; Tessario would earn the king’s enmity when he killed Ser Robin Massey in a quarrel over a horse. Lord Unwin wished to project strength and sternness, unlike the soft-spoken Ser Tyland Lannister before him. He made a show of the fact that he had appropriated Orphan-Maker, the Valyrian steel sword Bold Jon Roxton had carried at Tumbleton. And on the feast day of Our Father Above, a propitious time for judgments, he and Ser Victor meted out justice with a bloody efficiency. Scores had hands amputated, eight rapists were gelded and sent to the Wall, noses were slit, an eye was plucked out, and a number of murderers were hanged.
Septon Eustace departed King’s Landing soon after his dismissal and took up residence at Stoney Sept, the town of his birth. He devoted his time to writing his account of the Dance, titling it The Reign of King Viserys, First of His Name, and the Dance of the Dragons that Came After. In later years he would enter the ranks of the Most Devout.
The final three prisoners were the most prominent: the false Shepherd Reborn; a Pentoshi who was said to have captained the ship that brought the Winter Fever to King’s Landing; and Grand Maester Orwyle. Ser Victor Risley, in his position as King’s Justice, dealt with each one personally. He beheaded the false Shepherd and the Pentoshi captain with his headsman’s axe, but Grand Maester Orwyle had a nobler death by the sword, in recognition of his high birth and long service.
By midyear, the castle, city, and king were firmly in Lord Unwin’s grasp. So now his focus must turn to the wider realm, as trade remained practically nonexistent, the ironborn still warred against the westerlands, the Dornishmen were raiding into the marches, and winter’s harsh grip had caused a famine in the North.
Lord Unwin named his famous uncle Ser Gedmund Peake—known as Great-Axe for his favorite weapon—as commander of a fleet composed of eight great warships (commissioned by Ser Tyland) and twenty older cogs and galleys. Ser Gedmund was no sailor, so his second was a sellsail known as Ned Bean, more often called Blackbean for his beard. When they set sail for the Stepstones, Racallio Ryndoon’s power had largely been swept from the sea, but he still retained control of the largest isle, called Bloodstone. Braavos and Pentos jointly controlled most of the rest of the Stepstones. Knowing they could not defeat Braavos at sea, Lord Unwin ordered Ser Gedmund to defeat Ryndoon and his sellsails, then take over Bloodstone and use that as a base to keep the narrow sea open for trade. Ser Gedmund turned to Alyn Velaryon in turn, commanding him to turn over control of the Velaryon squadrons to Ned Bean. Lord Alyn refused to relinquish the command, but his ships dutifully joined the fleet.
By the time they reached the isle of Tarth, where their strength was augmented by a dozen longships commanded by Lord Bryndemere the Evenstar, the situation had changed on the Stepstones. The Sealord of Braavos, the Archon of Tyrosh, and Racallio Ryndoon had made common cause. With full control of the Stepstones, only ships licensed by Braavos or Tyrosh would be allowed safe passage. Learning of this, Gedmund Great-Axe sent word back to King’s Landing, wondering how to proceed. While Alyn Velaryon urged immediate action, saying that the element of surprise would be lost if they waited too long, Ser Gedmund refused to budge.
Lord Unwin and Tessario.
GRZEGORZ PRZYBYŚ
The king’s ships approach Tarth.
WEI GUAN
The next morning, the Velaryon fleet was gone. Gedmund cursed them, believing that they had fled back north to Driftmark, but the truth was otherwise. Lord Alyn had taken matters into his own hands and sailed south, and three days later he launched a devastating surprise attack that caught the Braavosi unaware. Half the Braavosi ships were captured, burned, or sunk. Lord Alyn won the name Oakenfist for sinking the great Braavosi dromond the Grand Defiance when he rammed it with his ship the Queen Rhaenys. His victory was complete, losing only three ships (though one, the True Heart, was lost with its captain, his cousin Daeron) but sinking more than thirty. He also captured seventeen and acquired many hostages and prizes—including an elephant intended for the menagerie of the Sealord of Braavos. Sailing back to King’s Landing, Lord Alyn was cheered by tens of thousands as he rode through the River Gate on the back of his elephant.
The reception at the Red Keep was much cooler, however. Privately, Lord Unwin threatened to behead him. The attack on the Braavosi had been a rash action, because it had left Ser Gedmund unable to invade Bloodstone and seize it from Racallio Ryndoon, whose pirate kingdom was now stronger than before. Moreover, a direct attack against a Braavosi fleet might well lead to a war the kingdom could ill afford.
Publicly, however, Lord Alyn received great accolades from Lord Peake and the council of regents, including knighthood, the office of master of ships, and a place on the king’s small council. What Alyn Oakenfist did not realize, however, was that there was poison hidden amid the sweets, for shortly thereafter he was asked to lead the Velaryon fleet to liberate Fair Isle and quell Lord Dalton Greyjoy, the Red Kraken, who had caused so much trouble in the west. The mission was a trap, designed by Lord Unwin to either weaken or kill Lord Alyn. And should he, against all odds, succeed … well, that would only enhance the reputation of the Hand and the council for having ordered the attack.
Lord Alyn gifted his elephant to the king, then proceeded to Hull to gather his ships and take leave of his wife, Lady Baela, who revealed to him that she was with child. From there, he departed on the galley Lady Baela for the long voyage into the west. The journey from King’s Landing to the westerlands was an arduous one, passing through the hostile Stepstones, along the barren and unwelcoming shores of Dorne, and into the teeth of the waiting ironborn.
Lord Alyn first had to pass through Stepstones, where he could either treat or fight with “Queen” Racallio. Oakenfist chose diplomacy, so Ryndoon hosted him for a madcap fortnight at his fortress on Bloodstone. Whether Lord Alyn was a captive or a guest was never quite clear, even to his lordship himself, for his host was as changeable as the sea. One day Ryndoon would hail Oakenfist as a friend and brother-in-arms and urge him to join him in an attack on Tyrosh, who controlled the other half of the Stepstones. The next he would throw the bones to see if he should put his guest to death. Ryndoon forced Alyn to wrestle him in a pit of mud, kill three Tyroshi prisoners, and sent two of his wives to Lord Alyn’s chambers so that Oakenfist could give him sons. (Sources are at odds as to whether Lord Alyn did as he was bid.)
In the end Ryndoon allowed that the Velaryon fleet might pass—for a price. He wanted three ships, an alliance writ on sheepskin and signed in blood, and a kiss. Oakenfist gave him the three least seaworthy ships in his fleet, an alliance writ on parchment and signed in maester’s ink, and the promise of a kiss from Lady Baela, should Ryndoon ever visit them on Driftmark. That proved sufficient, and the fleet sailed through the Stepstones.
Lord Alyn’s fleet.
FRANCISCO VEGAS
After the Stepstones came Dorne, but that was less of a challenge. The Dornishmen were understandably alarmed by the sudden appearance of the large Velaryon fleet in the waters off Sunspear. Lacking any strength at sea, however, they chose to regard Lord Alyn’s coming as a visit rather than an attack. Aliandra Martell, Princess of Dorne, came out to meet with him, accompanied by a dozen of her current favorites and suitors. The “new Nymeria” had just celebrated her eighteenth nameday, and was reportedly much taken with the young, handsome Oakenfist. The princess lavished a great deal of attention on Lord Alyn, to the displeasure of her younger siblings as well as her own lords and suitors, and some accounts claim she took him to her bed. When he left Dorne, he did so with fresh supplies and maps that showed him how to navigate the most dangerous whirlpools along the southern coast.
At Oldtown, Lord Alyn’s fleet was met with a grand welcome from Lord Lyonel Hightower and his paramour, Lady Sam. The two lords immediately took to one another, and Oldtown pledged twenty warships to Alyn’s fleet. Lord Redwyne was also to provide thirty ships, but delayed so long that Lord Alyn was forced to leave without them. More galleys joined them from the Shield Islands.
These additional ships quickly proved a boon, because Dalton Greyjoy had been warned of the approach of the Velaryon fleet and had gathered hundreds of longships off Fair Isle, and more off Feastfires, Kayce, and Lannisport. After he had sent “that boy” down to the halls of the Drowned God at the bottom of the sea, the Red Kraken proclaimed, he would take his own fleet back the way that Oakenfist had come, raise his banner over the Shields, sack Oldtown and Sunspear, and claim Driftmark for his own. He would even take Baela Targaryen as a twenty-third salt wife.
However, Greyjoy and Velaryon never met. On a stormy night at Faircastle, one of his twenty-two salt wives—a woman named Tess—opened Dalton’s throat from ear to ear as he slept before throwing herself into the sea. As word of his death spread, the fleet he had assembled to meet Alyn Oakenfist began to dissolve, as captain after captain slipped away for home to prepare for the coming war of succession—for Dalton had never taken a rock wife and had left only two salt sons as his heirs.
The people of Fair Isle then rose in rebellion, slaughtering any ironborn who remained on the island. By the time Lord Alyn arrived with his fleet, Fair Isle was liberated and there was no foe to fight. Despite this, he and his fleet were celebrated at Lannisport, and Lady Johanna feted Oakenfist and his captains. When discussion turned to the Iron Islands and the danger they still posed to the westerlands once their new leader was chosen, Lady Johanna proposed that Lord Alyn’s fleet ferry soldiers and knights from the west to invade the islands. Her purpose? To put every man to the sword, and sell the women and children to slavers, ridding Westeros of the ironborn forever.
Lord Alyn declined this proposal, but did allow a third of his fleet to remain behind to protect the west until such time as the Lannisters and their vassals rebuilt their own fleet. He sailed on to Oldtown again, then to Dorne and Sunspear where Princess Aliandra was most welcoming. It was there that he was approached by Drazenko Rogare, an envoy from Lys, and the very next day Lord Alyn set sail for Lys.
While all this was occurring, however, much was also happening in King’s Landing. Concurrent with Alyn’s departure from King’s Landing, Lord Unwin sent Lord Manfryd Mooton to Braavos, to treat with the Sealord, returning his elephant and hopefully negotiating a peace before the Braavosi could declare war. The pragmatic Sealord, valuing gold over glory, was more than willing to negotiate, and a peace was declared. But the huge indemnity demanded by the Sealord so depleted the royal treasury that Lord Peake found it necessary to borrow from the Iron Bank of Braavos just so the Crown might pay its debts; that in turn required him to reinstate certain of Lord Celtigar’s taxes that Ser Tyland Lannister had abolished, which angered lords and merchants alike and weakened his support amongst the smallfolk.
Alyn Velaryon and Aliandra Martell.
MARTINA FAČKOVÁ
Worse, on the twenty-second day of the ninth moon of 133 AC, Queen Jaehaera perished at the age of ten. She had been a strange and simpleminded girl, often given to weeping but generally happy to live a quiet life in her chambers with her kittens and dolls. And yet something had driven her to leap from her window in Maegor’s Holdfast to die a slow and pitiful death on the spikes below—the same choice her mother had made three years earlier. King’s Landing grieved for the little queen—especially the smallfolk—and rumors ran wild concerning her death and its cause. Some blamed the king’s lack of affection for his bride, but others refused to believe she killed herself and whispered that she had been murdered. Several culprits and motives were proposed, but the likeliest was Lord Unwin Peake, the Hand of the King, wishing to free Aegon III of his child bride so that he could go about the business of begetting heirs. And, of course, the Kingsguard knight who stood guard at Jaehaera’s door that day was the Hand’s own bastard half-brother, Ser Mervyn Flowers. Perhaps Ser Mervyn had either done the deed himself, or admitted some other cat’s-paw to fling the queen from her window. But the truth of these allegations was never proved, and so the question remains.
A mere seven days after Jaehaera’s funeral, Lord Unwin informed King Aegon III that it was time for him to marry again, and that a bride had been found for him: Myrielle Peake, the Hand’s only living child. At fourteen, she was only a year older than the king. However, this ambitious act went beyond what the other regents were willing to bear—especially as they had not been consulted. Lords Rowan and Mooton protested, and so too did Lady Jeyne from the Vale, Lords Kermit Tully and Benjicot Blackwood from the riverlands, and Lord Stark from the North. Also, by having put forward his own daughter, Lord Peake had inadvertently opened the door to the daughters of many other lords, great and small. In the end, it was decided that a great ball would be held on Maiden’s Day, in which all eligible highborn maidens were welcome to present themselves to the king for his choosing.
At this decree, a great excitement took hold of the court and city, and spread out across the realm. Peake, who still hoped to make his daughter queen, summoned her immediately to the city. Though Maiden’s Day was three moons away, his lordship wanted Myrielle at his side, in hopes that she might charm the king and therefore be chosen on the night of the ball. Yet even as he awaited his daughter’s arrival, Peake also set in motion several plans designed to undermine, defame, distract, and besmirch those he deemed his daughter’s most likely rivals.
All these calumnies reached the king’s ears—mostly from Mushroom’s lips, for the dwarf was much in His Grace’s company following the death of Queen Jaehaera. (Though Mushroom later confessed to having been paid handsomely to poison Aegon III against these prospective brides.) Nor were words the only means by which Lord Unwin sought to win his war for the king’s heart, if the whispers can be believed. Several candidates met with mishaps and disfiguring accidents. Some men began to talk of a “Maiden’s Day curse,” while others—wiser in the ways of power—saw unseen hands at work and held their tongues.
Not since the reign of King Viserys had there been a ball of any sort in King’s Landing, and this would be a ball like none other. At tourneys, women vied for the honor of being named the queen of love and beauty, but such reigns lasted only one night. Whichever maid King Aegon chose would reign over Westeros for a lifetime. The highborn descended on King’s Landing from every part of the Seven Kingdoms—and even from across the sea. To limit their numbers, Lord Peake decreed that the contest would be limited to maidens of noble blood under thirty years of age, yet even so, more than a thousand nubile girls crowded into the Red Keep on the appointed day.
Jaehaera’s death was not the only tragedy to befall the realm at the end of that year. Among some of the most notable were the following:
• Lady Rhaena announced she was with child, but miscarried a moon’s turn after.
• Famine spread through the North, as did the Winter Fever, which reached inland to Barrowton.
• A wildling raider, Sylas the Grim, led three thousand wildlings against the Wall, breaking through at Queensgate. Lord Cregan Stark, joined by several bannermen and a hundred rangers of the Night’s Watch, was forced to hunt them down.
• Ser Steffon Connington, the bold and handsome consort of Lady Elenda of Storm’s End, was killed in an ambush led by Wyland Wyl.
No doubt these maidens dreamed of dancing with the king, charming him with their wit, exchanging coy glances over a cup of wine. But there was to be no dancing, no wine, no opportunity for conversation. Due to the sheer number of the candidates, King Aegon III sat atop the Iron Throne while the maidens paraded beneath him one by one. As the king’s herald announced the name and lineage of each candidate, the girl would curtsy, the king would nod down at her, and then the next girl would be presented. Later, Mushroom would dub the occasion the “Maiden’s Day Cattle Show.”
Though the throne room was cavernous—the largest hall in the Seven Kingdoms outside of Harrenhal’s—there were a thousand maids at hand, and each with their retinues of parents, siblings, guards, and servants. It soon became too crowded to move, and suffocatingly hot, though outside a winter wind was blowing. The herald charged with announcing the name and lineage of each of the fair maidens lost his voice and had to be replaced. Four of the hopefuls fainted, along with a dozen mothers, several fathers, and a septon. One stout lord collapsed and died.
Lady Myrielle was early among the maidens presented to the king—and in the time she had spent in King’s Landing, she had often been in the king’s company thanks to the machinations of her lord father. The king seemed to like her well enough, even giving her one of Queen Jaehaera’s dolls. When she was brought before him that night, he spoke to her—the only contender he directly addressed—thanking her for her appearance. Lord Unwin surely took heart, believing that all his careful scheming had borne fruit. Yet it would all be undone by the king’s half-sisters—the very twins whose succession Unwin Peake had been so determined to prevent.
The foreign candidates for Aegon’s hand included a daughter of the Prince of Pentos, a sister of the Archon of Tyrosh, and women of ancient lineages from both Myr and Old Volantis. (Though the Volantene contingent never arrived, as they were carried off by corsairs from the Basilisk Isles.) There was even a daughter of a magister of Lys, whose garments were so translucent that the Kingsguard barred her entry into the hall until she changed into something more demure.
The Maiden’s Day Cattle Show.
WEI GUAN
Fewer than a dozen maids remained, and the press had thinned considerably, when a sudden trumpet blast heralded the arrival of Baela Velaryon and Rhaena Corbray. The doors to the throne room were thrown open, and the daughters of Prince Daemon entered on horseback, upon a blast of winter air. Lady Baela was great with child, Lady Rhaena wan and thin from her miscarriage, yet seldom had they seemed more united as they announced that they had found a new queen for their half-brother: Lady Daenaera Velaryon, daughter of the late Ser Daeron, who had died during Oakenfist’s attack on the Braavosi fleet.
Daenaera had been a ward of Lady Baela and Lord Alyn since the death of her father. She was six years old, and breathtakingly beautiful, the blood of Old Valyria apparent in her silver-gold hair, deep blue eyes, and skin as pale as winter snow. The king returned her smile, and after the last presentations had drawn to a close, announced that Daenaera would be his bride. Lord Unwin attempted to have the choice set aside by the council of regents the next day, arguing that a six-year-old girl would take too long to produce heirs, but the other regents overruled him. On the last day of 133 AC, King Aegon III wed Lady Daenaera of House Velaryon.
And indeed, the marriage seemed to make King Aegon a little happier. In the moons following, he seemed more willing to leave the castle, to practice at arms, to engage in his studies. He even attended council meetings—though this annoyed his Hand, who saw the boy-king’s presence as a nuisance at best and a rebuke at worst. The Hand’s hostility was not lost on King Aegon, and in time he stopped attending the council. And yet still Unwin stewed over the role the Velaryons had played in the choice of Aegon’s bride. He came to believe that Alyn and Baela intended to place their own future son on the throne. Baela’s delivery of a healthy infant girl briefly put his paranoia to rest—until part of the Velaryon fleet returned to King’s Landing bearing a cryptic message: Oakenfist had sent them on ahead whilst he sailed to Lys to secure “a treasure beyond price.”
These words inflamed Lord Peake’s suspicions. What was this treasure and how did Lord Velaryon mean to secure it? The smallfolk saw Oakenfist as a hero, while Peake was resented and reviled. Even within the Red Keep, there were many who hoped that the regents might remove Lord Peake as King’s Hand and replace him with Alyn Velaryon. The excitement occasioned by Oakenfist’s return was palpable, however, so all the Hand could do was seethe.
When Lady Baela’s sails were first seen across the waters of Blackwater Bay, every bell in King’s Landing began to toll. Thousands crowded onto the city walls to cheer, while thousands more rushed to line the shores. King Aegon and Queen Daenaera descended from the castle in their litter, accompanied by Lady Baela and her newborn daughter; her sister Lady Rhaena with her lord husband, Corwyn Corbray; Grand Maester Munkun; Septon Bernard; the regents Manfryd Mooton and Thaddeus Rowan; the knights of the Kingsguard; and many other notables eager to meet the Lady Baela at the docks.
The morning was bright and cold. There, before the eyes of tens of thousands, Lord Alyn Oakenfist beheld his daughter, Laena, for the first time. Then with a flamboyant gesture, he summoned forth the treasure he had brought from Lys. Down from the Lady Baela emerged a beautiful young woman, arm in arm with a richly clad boy near the king’s own age, his features hidden beneath the cowl of his embroidered cloak. When the boy threw back his cowl and the sunlight glittered on his silver-gold hair, King Aegon III began to weep, throwing himself upon this boy in a fierce embrace. For Oakenfist’s “treasure” was none other than Viserys Targaryen, the king’s lost brother, the youngest son of Queen Rhaenyra and Prince Daemon, presumed dead since the Battle of the Gullet and missing for close to five years.
As it happened, the ship carrying the young princeling had survived the battle and limped back home to Lys, where Viserys found himself a captive of the grand admiral of the Triarchy, Sharako Lohar. Defeat had left Sharako in disgrace, however, so he sold the boy to a magister named Bambarro Bazanne in return for Viserys’s weight in gold. After the Triarchy dissolved into war, Magister Bambarro thought it prudent to keep his prize hidden, lest the boy be acquired by one of his fellow Lyseni, or rivals from another city.
Viserys was well treated during his captivity. Though forbidden to leave the grounds of Bambarro’s manse, he had his own suite of rooms, shared meals with the magister and his family, and had tutors to instruct him in languages, literature, mathematics, history, and music. He even had a master-at-arms to teach him swordsmanship, at which he soon excelled. It is widely believed (though never proved) that Bambarro’s intent was to wait out the Dance of the Dragons, and then either ransom Prince Viserys back to his mother (should Rhaenyra emerge triumphant) or sell his head to his uncle (should Aegon II prove the victor).
Bambarro Bazanne died in the Disputed Lands in 132 AC, however, when the sellsword company he was leading against Tyrosh turned against him. Upon his death, it was discovered that he had been hugely in debt, and so his worldly possessions—including the captive princeling—passed into the hands of another nobleman, Lysandro Rogare. Lysandro was the patriarch of a rich and powerful banking dynasty, whose bloodlines could be traced back to Valyria before the Doom. Once he realized he had a prince in hand, the magister quickly married him to his youngest daughter, the Lady Larra Rogare.
The Regents accept Lord Unwin’s resignation.
GRZEGORZ PRZYBYŚ
The chance encounter between Alyn Velaryon and Drazenko Rogare at Sunspear had provided a perfect opportunity to return Prince Viserys to his brother … at a price. So it was first necessary that Oakenfist come to Lys and agree to terms. Oakenfist, however, was no haggler. To secure the prince, his lordship agreed that the Iron Throne would pay a ransom of one hundred thousand golden dragons, agree not to take up arms against House Rogare or its interests for a hundred years, entrust the Rogare Bank of Lys with such funds as were presently held by the Iron Bank of Braavos, grant lordships to three of Lysandro’s younger sons, and swear that the marriage between Viserys Targaryen and Larra Rogare would not be set aside. To all this Lord Alyn had agreed.
Prince Viserys had been seven when he was taken from the Gay Abandon. He was twelve on his return in 134 AC. His wife, the beautiful young woman who had walked arm in arm with him from the Lady Baela, was nineteen, seven years his senior.
The return of Viserys from the dead worked a wondrous change in Aegon III, with all his guilt at having abandoned his brother in the war finally assuaged and his childhood companion returned. Better, with Viserys alive, the succession was clear—and would be all the clearer when Larra of Lys bore his children, for the marriage had already been consummated.
One man, however, was not pleased: Lord Unwin, the Hand of the King. He was furious at the terms that Alyn had agreed to, but the council of regents overruled his objections and let the pact stand. Worse still, Lord Alyn was given new honors and rewards. Lord Peake was so angry that he threatened to resign, perhaps expecting that this might bend his fellow regents to his will. Instead the council accepted his resignation with alacrity, and appointed the bluff, honest, and well-regarded Lord Thaddeus Rowan in his place. Humiliated, Unwin Peake returned to Starpike to brood on all the wrongs he felt he had suffered, leaving behind him many kinsmen with appointments at court. He even left Tessario the Tiger and his Fingers to help guard the new Hand.
Lady Johanna’s revenge.
EDDIE MENDOZA
THE REMAINDER OF 134 AC passed peacefully enough in King’s Landing, marred only by the death of Manfryd Mooton, the last of King Aegon’s original regents. His lordship had been failing for some time, never truly having regained his strength after the Winter Fever, so his passing excited little comment. To take his place upon the council, Lord Rowan turned to Ser Corwyn Corbray, Lady Rhaena’s husband.
The rest of Westeros was less fortunate, however. The winter continued to bite hard in the North. Thousands starved, some men sold themselves to slavers so their wives and children had food, and a third of the Night’s Watch was killed by the cold and the famine, while hundreds more died fighting the thousands of wildlings who had gotten around the Wall by walking across the frozen sea at its eastern end.
In the Iron Islands, the bloody struggle for the Seastone Chair was heating up, as Dalton Greyjoy’s son Toron was seized by his aunts and their husbands, while Lords Harlaw and Blacktyde were joined by Toron’s cousins to raise up a younger salt-son, Rodrik. On Great Wyk, a pretender named Sam Salt, who claimed descent from the black line of Harren, made his own claim.
The fighting raged for half a year before Ser Leo Costayne, the Sea Lion, attacked the Iron Islands. He commanded the fleet that Lord Alyn Velaryon left behind to guard the west, but Lady Johanna had convinced him, in return for her hand in marriage, to ferry her forces across so she could seize control of the Iron Islands in her son’s name. It proved costly. Ser Leo was killed and most of his fleet destroyed, but Lady Johanna got her revenge. Hundreds of ironborn ships were burned, and countless homes and villages as well. Women and children were mercilessly put to the sword, a score of noble lords and ladies killed, and thousands more left to starve after the remainder of Johanna’s fleet carried off or spoiled all the stored fish and grain. To add insult to injury, Rodrik Greyjoy was gelded and made to serve as a fool for Lady Johanna’s son.
One more battle over succession broke out toward the end of 134 AC, with the death of the childless Lady Jeyne Arryn, the Maiden of the Vale. In her last testament, she named her fourth cousin, Ser Joffrey Arryn, the Knight of the Bloody Gate, as her heir. But this was immediately contested by two other claimants. The first was Ser Eldric Arryn, son of Lady Jeyne’s first cousin Ser Arnold, who had twice tried to depose her and had gone mad after years of imprisonment in the dungeons beneath the Gates of the Moon. The second was Isembard Arryn of the cadet branch of the wealthy Gulltown Arryns, who became known as the Gilded Falcon for his habit of paying lesser lords to support his claim and hiring sellswords from across the narrow sea to contest it in battle.
Lord Thaddeus Rowan and the regents attempted to restore order to the realm. Food was shipped to the North, but it was not nearly enough to end the famine. Lady Johanna was ordered to withdraw her forces from the Iron Islands, but she ignored the regents’ commands. So, too, did the rival claimants to the Eyrie, when Lord Thaddeus commanded them to present themselves at court to have their claims adjudicated.
Larra of Lys.
JOSHUA CAIRÓS
While the regents and the boy they served were increasingly ignored, another problem began to develop—one that struck at the very heart of the court. Though Prince Viserys was loved for his cleverness, gallantry, and the joy he brought to King Aegon, the same could not be said for his wife. Larra of Lys made no effort to integrate—or ingratiate—herself with the court. She had no interest in learning the Common Tongue, wore only Lysene fashions, kept only Lyseni companions and servants, and was guarded by Lysene swords by night and day. But all this the court and kingdom might have come to accept had Lady Larra not also insisted upon keeping her own gods. She would have no part in the worship of the Seven, nor the old gods of the northmen. And this only increased the prejudice against her.
Among the deities of Lys which Larra Rogare and her companions worshipped were the following:
Pantera
FRANCESCA BAERALD
• Pantera, the six-breasted cat goddess; cats were seen coming and going from Lady Larra’s rooms at all hours and were rumored to be her spies.
Bakkalon
FRANCESCA BAERALD
• Bakkalon of the Sword, the Pale Child.
Saagael
FRANCESCA BAERALD
• Saagael, a faceless god; every time a child disappeared in King’s Landing, Lady Larra was suspected of having used them as a blood sacrifice.
Yndros
FRANCESCA BAERALD
• Yndros of the Twilight, man by day and woman by night; some said Larra turned herself into a man at night, to take part in orgies in the Street of Silk.
Larra’s brothers were even less well-regarded. Her brother Moredo, captain of her guard and the bearer of the Valyrian steel sword Truth, was a stern and aloof man who had a poor grasp of the Common Tongue. Her brother Lotho established a branch of the Rogare Bank on Visenya’s Hill and was widely believed to have too much control over the realm by virtue of holding its purse strings. Finally, her brother Roggerio opened an opulent Lysene pillow house called the Mermaid, and filled it with parrots from the Summer Islands, monkeys from Sothoryos, and a hundred exotic girls and boys from every corner of the earth. Though their favors cost ten times as much as any other brothel dared to charge, Roggerio never lacked for customers.
By the end of 134 AC, many believed the Rogares to be using their positions and wealth to manipulate the court. Lotho bought men with gold, Roggerio seduced them with flesh, and Moredo frightened them into submission with steel. Yet the brothers were no more than puppets in the hands of Lady Larra; it was her and her queer Lysene gods, many said, who held their strings. Munkun would call this period the Rogare Ascendancy, but in King’s Landing it would be called the Lysene Spring, as early in 135 AC the Conclave in Oldtown declared an end to the harsh winter at last.
There was much hope in 135 AC that the new spring would bring peace and plenty. As if to herald that, Lady Rhaena flew her dragon Morning for the first time early that year. Not a fortnight later, Larra of Lys gave birth to a son—a child that the thirteenyear-old Prince Viserys named Aegon. Gifts flowed in from across the realm to mark the occasion, and in Lys the newly appointed First Magister for Life, Lysandro Rogare, declared a day of feasting to celebrate the birth of his grandson.
Yet this new Aegon’s arrival, initially met with joy, also sparked a new spate of rumors against Larra and her brothers. These rumors grew fiercer and wilder as the early hopes of 135 AC were proved false. The earliest omen was in Driftmark, when the dragon’s egg presented to Laena Velaryon upon her birth quickened and hatched … and from it came a wyrm, wingless and white, that immediately turned on the little girl in the cradle and tore a bloody chunk from her arm. Lord Alyn Velaryon leapt to his daughter’s defense, ripping the dragon off her and hacking it to pieces. No one could ever recall such an event happening in all the years since Aegon the Conqueror and his sisters had brought fire and blood to the Seven Kingdoms. Already fearful of dragons, King Aegon commanded that any dragon eggs in the Red Keep be sent to Dragonstone—a command that angered Prince Viserys, who did not wish to part with his still-unhatched egg. Viserys refused to speak with his brother in the aftermath.
Though the Rogares were subject to great suspicion, their wealth had a positive effect on the Seven Kingdoms. The Rogare Bank offered high returns, so more gold was entrusted to its vaults, and trade flourished with the Free Cities. King’s Landing may have profited the most, but all the other great ports of the realm saw substantial gains as well.
A deadly hatchling.
JOE SLUCHER
His Grace was much dismayed by the quarrel with his brother, but what happened next left him bereft and devastated. King Aegon was enjoying a quiet supper in his solar with his queen and his friend Gaemon Palehair when first the bastard boy and then Daenaera began to complain of a cramping in their guts. By the time Grand Maester Munkun arrived, Gaemon had collapsed. The Grand Maester gave Daenaera a powerful purgative, which most likely saved her life, but he had come too late for Gaemon. The boy—all of nine years old—died within the hour. George Graceford, the lord confessor, sharply questioned anyone who might have had contact with the apple tarts that Munkun had determined contained the poison. Under torture, seven confessed to attempting to poison the king … but each account differed from the next, there was no agreement on where they got the poison, and none of the captives could correctly name the dish wherein the poison had been contained, so the Hand dismissed these confessions as worthless.
Aegon’s grief at Gaemon’s loss did lead to a reconciliation with Prince Viserys. However, the brief brightening of the king’s mood that had arisen after his marriage and subsequent reunion with his brother came to an end, and he resumed his morose and melancholy demeanor, seeming to lose all interest in his court and kingdom. It proved a mood well-suited to the times—especially when word arrived from the Vale of Arryn.
Early in 135 AC, the Hand had dispatched Ser Corwyn Corbray and a thousand men to Gulltown to restore order and settle the matter of the succession. Upon his arrival, Ser Corwyn had declared Ser Joffrey Arryn the rightful Lord of the Eyrie. He imprisoned the Gilded Falcon and his sons, and executed Eldric Arryn, but Ser Arnold Arryn, Eldric’s mad father, escaped to Runestone, where Gunthor Royce gave him sanctuary. When Ser Corwyn arrived to winkle Ser Arnold out of his sanctuary, Lord Gunthor rode out to confront Corwyn in the ancient bronze armor, covered in the runes of the First Men, that had won him the name of the Bronze Giant. Though they were under a banner of parley, words grew heated, turned to curses, then to threats. When Corbray drew Lady Forlorn—whether to strike at Royce or merely threaten him—a crossbowman on Runestone’s battlements loosed a quarrel that pierced him through the breast.
Striking down one of the king’s regents was an act of treason, akin to attacking the king himself, and the Vale fell to war again in the wake of this act. Lord Quenton Corbray, Ser Corwyn’s nephew, joined the Hunters, Craynes, and Redforts to support Ser Joffrey, while Lord Gunthor and Ser Arnold Arryn found support from the Templetons, Tolletts, Coldwaters, Duttons, and lords throughout the Three Sisters and the Fingers. Even the Gilded Falcon still had support from Gulltown and its rulers, House Grafton.
The Hand arranged for five thousand men to march up the kingsroad, under the command of his eldest son, Ser Robert Rowan, to restore the King’s Peace. That number swelled as other forces joined the march, and by the time they entered the Mountains of the Moon, Rowan’s army numbered nine thousand men.
A second attack was then launched by sea. Oakenfist would command the fleet himself, whilst his wife, Lady Baela, went to Dragonstone to comfort her widowed twin (and incidentally make certain that Lady Rhaena did not attempt to avenge her husband’s death herself on Morning). The army Lord Alyn was to carry to the Vale would be commanded by Lady Larra’s brother Moredo Rogare, Lord Rowan announced, even though Moredo’s grasp of the Common Tongue was poor.
The parley at Runestone.
ERTAÇ ALTINÖZ
The fire witch.
ERTAÇ ALTINÖZ
Both attacks failed spectacularly. Lord Alyn’s ships easily landed troops at the walls of Gulltown, but many hundreds died taking the walls and fighting from house to house. And when his translator was slain, Moredo Rogare had great difficulty communicating with his own troops; the men did not understand his commands, and he did not understand their reports. Chaos ensued.
As for Ser Robert’s force, the march through the high road was beset by attacks from the savage clansmen who made their homes in the mountains, and the deep snows that slowed their march to a crawl. Three thousand men had died of exposure, hardship, or wildling attack by the time they arrived at the Bloody Gate under the command of the fifteen-year-old Lord Benjicot Blackwood, as Ser Robert Rowan had been among the dead. The survivors were in no state to fight on behalf of Joffrey Arryn—or anyone.
How matters would have proceeded had Moredo Rogare remained in control of his force are unknown, for dire news reached him that led him to abandon his command and sail for Braavos instead. And that news was the sudden and swift end of House Rogare, who had held such power in both Lys and the Seven Kingdoms. Moredo’s uncle Drazenko—who had wed Princess Aliandra of Dorne the previous year—was said to have choked to death on a fishbone, while Moredo’s father, Lysandro, drowned when his pleasure barge sank. That the two men died within a day of one another, separated by the breadth of the narrow sea, made many wonder if they had been assassinated. The Faceless Men of Braavos were widely believed to have been responsible for the killings, as no more subtle assassins are known. And with these deaths came a swift and deadly struggle among the magisters and merchant princes of Lys, fighting over the offices that were now vacant.
One incident during Robert Rowan’s march bears noting. When a dozen men climbed up to a mountain cave, hoping to find some shelter from the winds, they instead found scattered bones. And when they entered the cave itself, out came Sheepstealer, roaring and spouting flame. On his back was Nettles. Sixteen men were killed, and more burned, before the dragon and his rider flew off, deeper into the mountains. This would prove the last recorded sighting of the two.
Among the clans of the Mountains of the Moon, tales are still told of the “fire witch” who had lived in a secret valley. One clan even came to worship her, sending youths to her with gifts and declaring them men if they returned with burns that proved they had faced her and her dragon.
Lysandro’s vast wealth and holdings were divided among his children, but his eldest son, Lysaro, aspired to rule Lys as his father had. He purchased a thousand Unsullied, the eunuch slave-soldiers trained in Astapor, then set about winning the martial office of gonfaloniere. From this office, he intended to lead Lys into a short conflict with a rival Free City—either Tyrosh or Myr—so he could sack that city and use its wealth to restore the gold he took from the Rogare Bank to pay for both his office and his campaign. But word of the diversion of funds began to spread, and a rumor took hold that the Rogare Bank was unsound. Men began to demand the return of their deposits until a torrent of claims emptied Lysaro’s vaults and led to the bank’s collapse. Lysaro Rogare fled in the night, abandoning his family and his palace.
The collapse of the bank led to the collapse of House Rogare. All their holdings were seized to pay debts, and when that was not enough, the Rogares and their children were enslaved and sold. Lysaro Rogare was captured on the Rhoyne and sold back to Lys by the Triarchs of Volantis. There he was condemned and died a horrifying death, as those who had been made destitute by the collapse of the bank were permitted to lash him repeatedly, according to the magnitude of that loss.
As word spread of the downfall of House Rogare, waves of panic hit the Seven Kingdoms as merchants and lords realized that their deposits were now lost. Though Moredo escaped to Braavos, his brothers Lotho and Roggerio were both arrested in King’s Landing. It was at first thought that Lord Thaddeus had given the order, but a few hours later Ser Mervyn Flowers of the Kingsguard arrested him as well, while Tessario and his Fingers watched. Many and more were arrested: cousins and a nephew of Lord Rowan, two score servants and grooms and knights in Rowan’s service—and then Ser Amaury Peake approached Maegor’s Holdfast with the intention of arresting Lady Larra herself.
Awaiting him was Prince Viserys, carrying a heavy axe, and King Aegon. When they asked who had commanded her arrest, Ser Amaury revealed it was the new Hand of the King: Ser Marston Waters, Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. Ser Amaury even claimed that Ser Marston had been appointed by the regents, though only two of those regents remained and one of them—Lord Thaddeus—had just been removed from that position at Ser Marston’s command. Viserys warned them not to cross the drawbridge, driving his axe into the wood to mark the line they must not pass. As the prince and the king withdrew, Sandoq the Shadow stepped forward. Huge and powerful, black of hair and skin, he was a mute pit fighter from Meereen who had survived a thousand fights. He had been sent by Lysandro Rogare to act as Larra’s defender, and now he proved his skill, carrying a black shield of nightwood and a curved sword with a dragonbone hilt and a Valyrian steel blade. Ser Amaury and the dozen men-at-arms he had brought all died, cut down like so much wheat at harvest.
For eighteen days, Maegor’s Holdfast stayed shut, with the king and his brother inside. The rest of the Red Keep was in the hands of Ser Marston Waters and his Kingsguard, while beyond the castle walls Ser Lucas Leygood and his gold cloaks kept a firm grip on King’s Landing. But neither could entice the king from his sanctuary. Ser Marston declined to storm the holdfast, in part because he did not wish to dishonor his vows by attacking his own king. Instead, on the twelfth day, Lord Thaddeus Rowan was brought out from the dungeons in chains. He was a broken man, his face and body bearing the marks of torture. He had confessed to a long list of crimes, including conspiring with Oakenfist against Lord Unwin Peake, looting the Rogare Bank, and plotting with the Rogares to poison Aegon and Daenaera and place Viserys and Larra on the throne instead.
Sandoq the Shadow meets Ser Amaury Peake.
ERTAÇ ALTINÖZ
But when Prince Viserys questioned the former Hand, he discovered that Lord Thaddeus had been so badly broken that he would admit to anything. At that, the king commanded Ser Marston to seize Lord George Graceford, the lord confessor, and Ser Marston did as the king commanded. To this day, some assert that Ser Marston Waters was no more than a cat’s-paw, a simple honest knight used and deceived by men more subtle than himself, whilst others argue that Waters was part of the plot from the beginning, but abandoned his fellows when he sensed the tide turning against them.
Regardless of why Ser Marston obeyed, it did not prove necessary to subject the lord confessor to torment; the sight of the instruments was all that was required for him to give up the names of the other conspirators. Amongst those he named were Ser Amaury Peake and Ser Mervyn Flowers of the Kingsguard; Tessario the Tiger; Septon Bernard; Ser Gareth Long; Ser Victor Risley; the Commander of the City Watch, Ser Lucas Leygood, and six of the seven captains of the city gates; and three of the queen’s ladies.
Not all surrendered peacefully. Lucas Leygood and eight others died when men-at-arms came to arrest him. Tessario the Tiger was captured as he tried to buy passage to the Port of Ibben. Ser Marston Waters chose to arrest Ser Mervyn Flowers himself, as they were both bastards and sworn brothers of the Kingsguard. Flowers offered his sword in surrender, only to seize Waters’s arm as he reached for it, driving a dagger into his belly. Ser Mervyn was killed while trying to saddle a horse and escape, while Ser Marston Waters died of his injuries that night.
But when considering all the conspirators, one person connected most of them, either by kinship or by association, and his name was Lord Unwin Peake, the former Hand of the King. There were those at court who came to suspect his influence behind all that had happened, but Peake had been at Starpike during the secret siege, and none of his supposed cat’s-paws ever spoke his name, so his involvement remained unproven.
So thick was the miasma of mistrust in the Red Keep that Aegon III did not leave Maegor’s Holdfast for six more days after his brother Viserys unraveled Lord Rowan’s false confession. Only when he saw Grand Maester Munkun send forth a murder of ravens, summoning his most loyal lords to King’s Landing, did His Grace allow the bridge to be lowered once again. They had run so short of food within the holdfast that Queen Daenaera cried herself to sleep at night, and two of her ladies were so weak from hunger that they had to be helped across the moat.
The death of Ser Marston Waters.
NUTCHAPOL THITINUNTHAKORN
Soon thereafter, Thaddeus Rowan once more took up residence in the Tower of the Hand … but it was plain to all that his lordship was in no fit state to resume his duties. The things that had been done to him in the dungeons had broken him. After a moon’s turn, with Lord Rowan showing little or no signs of improvement, Grand Maester Munkun persuaded the king to relieve him of his office. Rowan set out for his seat at Goldengrove, promising to return to King’s Landing once he had recovered his health, but he died upon the road in the company of two of his sons. And for the rest of that year, the Grand Maester served as both regent and Hand, for Aegon had still not reached the age of manhood. Yet as a maester, chained and sworn to serve, Munkun did not feel it was his place to pass judgment on high lords and anointed knights, so the accused traitors languished in the dungeons, awaiting a new Hand.
In 136 AC, a gathering of lords arrived to form something like a great council, though it was not formally given that name. Lords from the crownlands, riverlands, and stormlands were the most numerous, but from the Vale had come Lord Alyn Oakenfist, who with Bloody Ben Blackwood had at last forced Joffrey Arryn’s rivals and their respective supporters to bend the knee; thus were Isembard Arryn, Ser Arnold Arryn, and Lord Gunthor Royce all pardoned. With him came Lord Arryn and several other lords. Lady Johanna Lannister sent representatives, while Lord Torrhen Manderly, Lord Lyonel Hightower, and Lady Sam came in person. And, notably, Lord Unwin Peake also attended, bringing a thousand men-at-arms and five hundred sellswords. Once gathered, the lords argued for a fortnight before new regents were chosen, and various offices—most critically, that of the King’s Hand—were filled. Once this was settled, King Aegon III put his seal to the matter.
Afterward, the trials began and would continue for thirty-three days. Of the forty-two who were accused, eighteen remained to be judged; the rest had either fled or died. Prince Viserys attended every trial—often accompanied by his wife, her belly swelling with their second child, and their son Aegon with his wet nurse—while King Aegon attended only three: the trials of Ser Gareth Long, Lord George Graceford, and Septon Bernard. Long and Graceford were condemned but allowed to take the black, as were a number of gold cloaks and the surviving Fingers, while Septon Bernard was allowed to live at the High Septon’s behest but was gelded and forced to walk back to Oldtown as penance. Ser Victor Risley, formerly the King’s Justice, demanded a trial by combat, and was quickly slain by Ser Gareth Long, who had been the first man to name Risley in the plot. This left three of Queen Daenaera’s ladies. Lucinda Penrose and Priscella Hogg were condemned to have their noses cut off—with the understanding that the punishment would be stayed should they give themselves to the Faith, so long as they remained true to their vows. Cassandra Baratheon, who had confessed to having shared her bed with Ser Mervyn Flowers and occasionally Tessario the Tiger, was married to an aged knight from Cape Wrath named Ser Walter Brownhill. Ser Walter had fathered sixteen children by his previous wives, thirteen of whom still lived. It was thought that caring for these children—and any additional sons or daughters that she herself might give her new husband—would keep Lady Cassandra from plotting any further treasons. (And so it did.)
The following offices were decided by the gathering of lords:
Three new regents, chosen by lot: Willam Stackspear, Marq Merryweather, and Lorent Grandison
Lord Torrhen Manderly, Hand of the King
Isembard Arryn, master of coin
Ser Gedmund Peake, lord admiral and master of ships
Ser Raynard Ruskyn, Lord Commander of the Kingsguard
Ser Adrian Thorne, Commander of the City Watch
This concluded the last of the treason trials, but the dungeons beneath the Red Keep had not yet been emptied. The fate of Lady Larra’s brothers Lotho and Roggerio remained to be decided. Though innocent of high treason, murder, and conspiracy, they still stood accused of fraud and theft, for the collapse of the Rogare Bank had led to the ruination of thousands in Westeros as well as Lys. They were duly tried, but even those who most despised them could offer no shred of proof that either had known of their brother’s depredations in Lys, or had benefited from his plundering in any way. In the end, the banker Lotho was adjudged guilty of theft, for taking gold and gems and silver not his own and failing to restore the same on demand. Lord Manderly gave him the choice of taking the black, or having his right hand removed as if he were a common thief. Lotho, who was left-handed, chose mutilation. Nothing at all could be proved against his brother Roggerio, but Lord Manderly sentenced him to seven lashes all the same—for no other crime than being a “thrice-damned Lyseni.”
With the trials completed, many of the lords who had come to King’s Landing departed. As Hand of the King, Torrhen Manderly proved to be an honest and capable ruler in Aegon III’s name, and he soon became the most influential man at court, as the three new regents proved more followers than leaders. Lord Torrhen ensured that various offices were filled with good and capable men, saw the Kingsguard restored to its full complement of seven, enacted a major reform of the taxes with the help of Isembard Arryn, provided some relief to lords and merchants who had suffered losses with the collapse of the Rogare Bank, and repudiated Alyn Oakenfist’s pact with House Rogare, since that house no longer existed. King Aegon never warmed to his new Hand, but His Grace did not have a trusting nature, and the events of the past year had only served to deepen his suspicions. Nor could Lord Torrhen be said to have had much regard for the king, whom he referred to as “that sullen boy.” Manderly did become fond of Prince Viserys, however, and doted on Queen Daenaera.
The trial of Lotho and Roggerio Rogare.
In the wake of the trials, Roggerio would sell his possessions to buy a cog, named the Mermaid’s Daughter, that would serve as a roving pleasure house. Lotho became a confidant and councillor to Lady Sam and Lord Lyonel Hightower, advising them in the creation of the Bank of Oldtown, which increased the already considerable wealth of the Hightowers. Moredo Rogare, alone of the brothers to escape the Seven Kingdoms, would convince the keyholders of the Iron Bank of Braavos to fund an attack on Lys; three years later, he would be in position to reclaim the bones of his brother Lysaro and see them interred in the family tomb in Lys.
When Larra gave birth to her second son, a boy named Aemon, Lord Torrhen arranged a celebratory feast. The court was delighted by the birth of yet another potential heir to the Iron Throne … or at least, most of it was. Aemon’s brother, the year-and-a-half-old Aegon, was discovered one day striking his infant brother with the dragon egg in his cradle, but Lady Larra intervened before any harm could be done.
Shortly thereafter, Lord Alyn Oakenfist grew restless and began to make plans for the second of his six great voyages. The Velaryons had entrusted much of their gold to Lotho Rogare and lost more than half their wealth in consequence. To restore their fortunes, Lord Alyn assembled a large fleet of merchantmen, with a dozen of his war galleys to guard them, intending to sail to Old Volantis by way of Pentos, Tyrosh, and Lys, visiting Dorne on the way home. Lady Baela was less than delighted by the visit to Dorne, knowing the now-widowed Princess Aliandra’s fondness for her husband, but their quarrel was quickly resolved, and at midyear Lord Alyn sailed away, leaving Lady Baela, carrying their second child, behind.
Brotherly love.
BORJA PINDADO
With King Aegon’s sixteenth nameday and subsequent majority fast approaching, Lord Torrhen Manderly determined that King Aegon and Queen Daenaera should make a royal progress to mark his coming of age. It would be good for the boy to see the lands he ruled, the Hand reasoned, to show himself to his people. Aegon was tall and comely, and his young queen could supply whatever charm the king might lack. The commons would surely love her, which could only be of benefit to the solemn young king.
The regents concurred. Plans were made for a grand progress lasting a full year, one that would take His Grace to parts of the realm that had never seen a king before. Hundreds of knights and lords begged the honor of a royal visit, and the planning for the progress consumed the court. Lady Rhaena asked to attend with her dragon, Morning, but the king’s antipathy to dragons meant that her request was denied. Lady Baela, on the other hand, insisted on taking part regardless.
And then came King Aegon’s nameday. A great feast was to be held that night in the throne room, and the ancient Guild of Alchemists had promised displays of pyromancy such as the realm had never seen. It was still morning, though, when King Aegon entered the council chamber, where Lord Torrhen and the regents debated the last details of the progress. With him came four of the knights of the Kingsguard, and the hulking figure of Sandoq the Shadow. Curtly, the king stated his readiness to rule, and had Lord Torrhen remove himself from the head seat at the council table. Then he informed the council that the progress was canceled. Though Lord Torrhen tried to persuade him that it would win him the love of the people, King Aegon stated that he would do that through providing peace, food, and justice. He even called off the nameday feast in his honor, sending the food to the poor instead. “Full bellies and dancing bears shall be my policy,” the king announced, before relieving the regents and the Hand of their offices and granting them leave to return to their seats.
Lord Torrhen Manderly left for White Harbor less than a fortnight later, in company with Mushroom. The fool had grown fond of the big northman and had eagerly accepted his offer of a place at White Harbor rather than remain with a king who seldom smiled and never laughed. But Manderly was far from cheerful on the journey home. Instead, he gnawed at the humiliation he felt at his brusque dismissal and what he called the “murder” of the royal progress. King Aegon had turned a loyal and devoted servant into an enemy with his first act—an omen of things to come.
And so the broken reign of the Broken King began.
The end of the regency.
PAOLO PUGGIONI
The page numbers in this index relate to the printed version of this book; they do not match the pages of your ebook. You can use your ebook reader’s search tool to find a specific word or passage.
A
Addam Hightower, 38–39
Addam (of Hull) Velaryon, 223–24, 243, 247–48, 253, 261, 263–64, 266–67
Addison Hill, 46
Adrian Tarbeck, 229, 232
Adrian Thorne, 338
Aegon Ambrose, 72
Aegon’s High Hill, 26, 77, 89, 111, 162, 229
Aegon I (The Conqueror) Targaryen
banner of, 26
Blackfyre and, 36, 179
court of, 42, 43
crowning of, 26, 30, 35
death of, 51
and the Iron Throne, 31, 32–33, 35
landing and conquest by, 11, 25–31
lineage of, 344
marriages of, 21–22, 49
reign of, 35–51
Aegon II Targaryen (Aegon the Elder)
banner of, 218
birth of, 185
coronation of, 198–99, 201, 205, 209
death of, 283
at King’s Landing, 274, 275
lineage of, 345
reign of, 201–83
Aegon III (The Unlucky) Targaryen (Aegon the Younger)
birth of, 196
healing hands of, 304–5
at King’s Landing, 286, 287
lineage of, 344
marriages of, 274, 278–79, 295, 320
personality of, 287
regency of, 287–343
Stormcloud and, 207, 223, 226
Aegon (The Uncrowned) Targaryen (son of Aenys I), 50, 64, 66, 71, 73, 76–77, 81–82, 85, 109, 113, 344
Aegon Targaryen (son of Baelon), 158, 345
Aegon Targaryen (son of Jaehaerys I), 129, 345
Aegon Targaryen (son of Viserys II), 328, 338, 341, 344
Aemma Arryn, 157, 177, 180, 181, 212, 344
Aemond (One-Eye) Targaryen, 185, 193–195, 197, 205, 207, 214–15, 220, 222, 227, 229, 232, 233, 236, 238, 240–41, 243, 244, 246, 248–51, 260, 303, 344
Aemon Targaryen (son of Jaehaerys I), 138, 149, 151, 153, 157, 158, 166–67, 345
Aemon Targaryen (son of Viserys II), 341, 344
Aenar Targaryen, 7, 21, 147
Aenys I Targaryen
birth of, 49
Blackfyre and, 179
children of, 50
crowning of, 51, 52–53, 55
death of, 66
lineage of, 345
personality of, 49
reign of, 55–66
royal progresses of, 50, 51
tension between Maegor and, 63–66
wedding of, 50
Aerea Targaryen, 77, 92, 93, 99, 104, 105, 107, 122, 123, 127, 128, 131, 135–36, 138–39, 179, 344
Aerion Targaryen, 344
Aethan Velaryon, 45
Alan Beesbury, 222, 226
Alan Tarly, 222, 226
Alaric Stark, 109, 120, 141–42, 151
Alayne Royce, 107, 118
Albin Massey, 125, 138, 145
Alfador, Maester, 197
Alfred Broome, 268–70, 274, 280
Alfyn, Septon, 127, 134
Aliandra Martell, 298, 302, 314–15, 333, 342
Alicent Hightower, 173, 183, 185–87, 189–90, 193–97, 201–5, 209, 217, 226, 229–30, 236, 244–45, 259, 273–74, 277, 279–80, 288, 304, 344
Allard Royce, 56
Alton Celtigar, 45–46
Alyn of Hull. See Alyn Velaryon
Alyn Stokeworth, 44, 46, 56, 60
Alyn Tarbeck, 92
Alyn (Oakenfist) Velaryon (Alyn of Hull), 224, 266, 272–74, 277, 279, 288, 291, 293, 295, 298–300, 307, 309, 311–12, 314–15, 320–21, 323, 329, 331, 333, 336, 338, 339, 341–42, 345
Alysanne Blackwood (Black Aly), 217, 293–95, 302
Alysanne Targaryen, 50, 66, 85, 86, 93, 97, 99, 104, 107, 111–17, 120–21, 125–29, 131, 132, 134–36, 138–39, 141–42, 147, 149, 151–53, 155, 157–58, 161–63, 166, 169–70, 173, 178, 179, 208, 223, 345
Alys Harroway, 63, 65, 73, 77, 85–86, 93, 344
Alys Oakheart, 39
Alys Rivers, 232, 240, 241, 251, 302–4
Alyssa Targaryen, 147, 153, 157, 158, 161, 163, 345
Alyssa Velaryon, 50, 55, 58, 63, 66, 71, 73, 76, 81, 85, 86, 91–93, 99, 100, 107, 109–13, 115–16, 120–22, 125–27, 129–30, 134–35, 148, 179, 205, 345
Alys Turnberry, 158, 161
Alys Westhill. See Elissa Farman
Amaury Peake, 307, 334–36
Amos Bracken, 211, 217
Androw Farman, 107, 108, 109, 115, 118, 135–37, 344
Anselm, Maester, 136
Argella, 12, 25, 29
Argilac the Arrogant, 12, 25–27, 29
Arlan III, 12
Arlan V, 12
Arnold Arryn, 326, 330, 338
Arrax, 192, 207, 214, 215
Arrec, 12
Arryk Cargyll, 180, 201, 220
Arryn, House, 16, 218. See also individual members
Artys I Arryn, 16
B
Baela Targaryen, 191, 207, 246, 270, 272–74, 279, 283, 292, 300, 301, 312, 314, 320–21, 331, 341–42, 345
Baelon (The Brave) Targaryen (son of Jaehaerys I), 139, 151, 153, 157, 158, 161–62, 166, 169, 170, 179, 345
Baelon Targaryen (son of Viserys I), 181, 344
Bakkalon of the Sword, 327
Baldrick, Septon, 127
Balerion the Black Dread, 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 31, 35, 38, 39, 55, 56, 63, 71, 75, 78, 82, 136, 138, 139, 153, 168, 169, 170, 190, 251
Balon Byrch, 254, 268
Bambarro Bazanne, 321
Barth, Septon, 126, 134, 138–39, 142, 147, 161, 169
Bartimos Celtigar, 209, 236, 247, 253, 254, 296, 316
Benifer, Grand Maester, 93, 113, 115, 134, 138
Benjicot Blackwood (Bloody Ben), 234, 261, 264, 266, 280, 281, 294, 316, 333
Bernard, Septon, 308, 321, 336, 338–39
Bernarr Brune, 60, 72
Bertrand Tyrell, 147
Black Aly. See Alysanne Blackwood
The Black Brides, 90, 91, 92, 100, 113, 127
Blackfyre, 36, 50, 63, 93, 149, 161, 179, 274
Black Trombo, 240, 263
Blackwood, House, 295. See also individual members
Blood, 217
Bloody Ben. See Benjicot Blackwood
Bold Jon Roxton, 248, 263, 266, 302, 309
Boremund Baratheon, 129, 148, 155, 166, 204–5, 209, 345
Borros Baratheon, 204–5, 209, 214–15, 235, 273–74, 277–80, 282, 283, 291, 300, 302
Borys Baratheon, 117, 122, 148–51
Bramm of Blackhull, 72
Brandon Snow, 30
Brandon Stark, 109, 120
Bran the Builder, 11, 17
Braxton (Stinger) Beesbury, 158, 161
The Burning Knight, 256
Burning Mill, Battle of the, 217, 218–19
Byron Swann, 242, 243
C
The Caltrops, 261, 262, 263, 266, 308
Cannibal, 208, 223, 246
Caraxes the Blood Wyrm, 151, 158, 166, 185, 187, 191, 192, 193, 207, 210, 211, 243, 246, 251
Cassandra Baratheon, 274, 295, 339
Castle Driftmark, 164
Caswell, Lady, 238–39
A Caution for Young Girls, 117, 121
Century of Blood, 21
Ceryse Hightower, 50, 63, 76, 78, 81, 89, 100, 344
Cheese, 217
The Citadel, 30, 134, 135
Clement Celtigar, 291
Corlys Velaryon (The Sea Snake), 46, 133, 154, 163–66, 170, 183–85, 187, 190, 196, 207, 209, 218, 222, 224, 226, 230, 243, 248, 253, 259, 273, 274, 278–80, 287–88, 290–96, 298–300, 345
Corwyn Corbray, 288, 300, 321, 325, 330, 345
Corwyn Velaryon, 164
Coryanne Wylde, 116–17, 121
Craghas (Crabfeeder) Drahar, 183–85
Cregan Stark, 212, 214, 279, 288–96, 302, 317
Crispian Celtigar, 45
Criston Cole, 180, 185, 187, 189, 201–5, 218, 220, 222, 229, 232, 236, 238, 240–41
Culiper, Maester, 136
D
Daella Targaryen, 149, 153–58, 177, 344
Daemion Velaryon, 299
Daemon Targaryen, 157, 170, 178–81, 183–85, 187, 190–96, 202, 203, 206–7, 209, 211–12, 214–15, 217–18, 222, 227, 229–30, 232, 238, 243, 246–51, 254, 279, 297, 300, 320, 321, 345
Daemon Velaryon, 26, 45, 91, 93, 109, 113, 122, 125, 136, 164
Daenaera Velaryon, 320–21, 330, 336, 337, 339, 341, 342, 344
Daenerys Targaryen, 131, 145, 147, 153, 158, 345
Daenys (The Dreamer) Targaryen, 7, 21
Daeron (The Daring) Targaryen, 190, 193, 207, 222, 226, 235, 236, 238, 241, 243, 244, 246, 248, 253, 260–61, 263, 264, 267, 344
Daeron Velaryon, 299, 311, 320
Dalton Greyjoy (The Red Kraken), 204, 229, 236, 240, 291, 297, 312, 314, 325
Damon Darry, 303–4
Damon (The Devout) Morrigen, 71, 72, 100
The Dance of the Dragons, 202, 204, 214, 280, 287, 308
Dark Sister, 45, 50, 86, 178, 179, 180, 191, 251
Darry, House, 211. See also individual members
Davos Baratheon, 58
Defenestration of Sunspear, 36, 37
Dennis the Lame, 100, 101
Deria Martell, 40, 56
Derrick Darry, 261
Desmond, Grand Maester, 85
Desmond Manderly, 212, 301
Dick Bean, 72
Dickon Flowers, 72
Donald Tarly, 291
Donnel (The Delayer) Hightower, 101, 122, 134, 145
Dorne, 18, 36, 38–40
The Dragonkeepers, 138, 151, 153, 256
The Dragonpit, 89, 111, 120, 126, 131, 138, 139, 151, 161, 173, 205, 236, 247, 254, 256–59, 274, 277, 296
Dragonstone, 7, 20, 21, 65, 86, 87, 128, 147, 269
Dragon’s Wroth, 39
Drazenko Rogare, 315, 323, 333
Dreamfyre, 55, 64, 81, 82, 92, 93, 118, 120, 127, 136, 193, 207, 222, 256
Driftmark, 191
Dunstan Pryor, 161
Durrandon, House, 11–12, 29
Durran Godsgrief, 11
E
Edmyn Tully, 27, 41, 45, 55
Edwell Celtigar, 92, 93, 109, 113, 120, 125,145
Eldric Arryn, 326, 330
Elenda Baratheon, 291, 295, 302, 317
Elinor Costayne, 92, 93, 95, 113, 127, 344
Elissa Farman (Alys Westhill), 107, 118, 132–34, 139
Ella Broome, 116
Ellyn Baratheon, 295
Ellyn Caron, 58
Elmo Tully, 211, 261, 277, 279
Elysar, Grand Maester, 147, 153, 154, 161, 169
Erryk Cargyll, 180, 201, 207, 220
Essie, 260, 274
Eustace, Septon, 187, 189, 193, 203, 204, 205, 212, 231, 238, 243, 254, 259, 288, 290, 305, 308
Eustace Hightower, 133
Exceptionalism, Doctrine of, 126–27, 132, 134, 136, 147
The Eyrie, 30, 56, 57
F
The Faith Militant, 65–66, 75, 85, 91, 101
Field of Fire, 8–9, 11, 29, 30
fire witch, 332, 333
The Fishfeed, 234–35, 236, 240
Florence Fossoway, 147
Florian the Fool, 128
Floris Baratheon, 274, 295, 300
Forrest (Fool) Frey, 188, 211
Fourteen Flames, 7
Franklyn Farman, 118
G
Gael (The Winter Child) Targaryen, 153, 169, 345
Gaemon Palehair, 254, 259, 274, 291, 298, 308, 329–30
Gaemon Targaryen, 152, 345
Gaemon the Glorious, 152, 173
Galon Whitestaff, 13
Gardener, House, 14–15, 29. See also individual members
Gareth Long, 308, 336, 338, 339
Gargon Qoherys, 55
Garibald Grey, 234, 240, 244, 246
Garibald of the Seven Stars, 72
Garmon Hightower, 39
Garse VII Gardener, 12
Garth Greenhand, 14
Gawen, Grand Maester, 46, 71
Gedmund (Great-Axe) Peake, 309, 311–12, 338
George Graceford, 308, 330, 336, 338
Gerardys, Grand Maester, 193, 197, 206, 247, 248, 268, 270
The Giant of the Trident, 50
Glendon Goode, 254, 256
The Golden Wedding, 109–12, 127, 138, 151
The Goodwife, 128
Goren Greyjoy, 58
Gormon Massey, 223
Great Council (of 101 AC), 170–71, 173, 177, 178, 180, 202, 204
Great Tourney (of 111 AC), 174–75, 177, 185
Gregor Goode, 46
Grey Ghost, 208, 223–24, 246, 270
Griffith Goode, 46
Grover Tully, 211, 277
Gullet, Battle of the, 27, 224, 226–27, 321
Gunthor Darklyn, 268
Gunthor Royce, 330, 338
Guy (The Glutton) Lothston, 72
Gwayne Hightower, 204, 229
Gyles Belgrave, 283, 292, 293
Gyles Morrigen, 100, 111, 152
Gyles Yronwood, 256
H
Hal Hornwood, 295
Hard Hugh Hammer, 223, 243–44, 246, 248, 260, 263
Harlan Tyrell, 29, 36
Harmon Dondarrion, 56, 58
Harrenhal, 13, 24, 25, 27, 29, 85, 170, 232, 233, 248, 249, 302, 303
Harren the Black, 13, 25–27, 55, 86, 325
Harren the Red, 55, 56, 60
Harrold Langward, 100
Harrold Westerling, 187
Harwin (Breakbones) Strong, 180, 188, 189, 192, 195, 196
Harwyn Hoare, 12, 13
Harys Horpe, 72
Helaena Targaryen, 185, 193, 196–97, 207, 216–17, 222, 230, 253, 256, 273, 345
The High Septon, 30, 43, 50, 55, 63–66, 72, 76–78, 81, 85, 92, 93, 101–3, 111, 113, 115, 122, 134, 145, 205, 292, 295, 302–3, 339
Hightower, House, 30, 164, 183, 340. See also individual members
Hoare, House, 13, 27, 35, 36
Hobb the Hewer, 256
Hobert Hightower, 248, 260, 261, 266
Horys Hill, 73, 75, 77
Howard Bullock, 121
Hubert Arryn, 56
Hugh the Hammer. See Hard Hugh Hammer
Humfrey Bracken, 217
Humfrey Lefford, 232, 235
Humfrey the Mummer, 46
I
Iron Islands, 13
Iron Throne, 31, 32–33, 35
Isembard Arryn (The Gilded Falcon), 326, 330, 338, 339
J
Jacaerys (Jace) Velaryon, 189–90, 192, 194, 196, 197, 206–7, 209, 212, 214, 222–24, 226, 228, 229, 288, 345
Jaehaera Targaryen, 196, 217, 230, 236, 240, 256, 273, 274, 278–79, 291, 295, 298, 300, 304, 308, 316–18, 345
Jaehaerys I (The Conciliator) Targaryen
birth of, 50
Blackfyre and, 161, 179
childhood of, 66, 85, 86, 92, 93
crowning of, 102–4
Dark Sister and, 179
death of, 172, 173
early reign of, 125–39
later reign of, 157–73
lineage of, 344
meets with leaders of the Free Cities, 140, 141
proclamation of, 93, 95
regency of, 98–122
returns to King’s Landing, 106, 107
royal progresses of, 96, 99, 124, 125, 128, 141, 149, 163
wedding of Alysanne and, 114
works of, 141–55
Jaehaerys Targaryen (son of Aegon II), 196, 217, 220, 256, 345
Jason Lannister, 188, 229
Jasper (Ironrod) Wylde, 202, 230, 236
Jennis Templeton, 116, 131
Jeyne Arryn (Maiden of the Vale), 190, 209, 212, 222, 268, 277, 279, 280, 292, 296, 298, 300, 307, 316, 326, 327
Jeyne Rowan, 291
Jeyne Westerling, 92, 93, 344
Jocasta Lannister, 107, 118–20
Jocelyn Baratheon, 135, 148, 149, 151, 153, 166, 345
Joffrey Arryn, 326, 330, 333, 338
Joffrey Dayne, 38–39
Joffrey Doggett (Red Dog of the Hills), 77, 85, 91, 93, 101, 104, 111–12
Joffrey Lonmouth (Knight of Kisses), 189, 192
Joffrey Velaryon, 192–194, 206–7, 212, 222, 238, 243, 254, 256, 345
Johanna Lannister (Lady of Casterly Rock), 229, 291, 295, 297, 301–2, 314, 325–27, 338
Johanna Swann (Black Swan), 184
Jonah Mooton, 158, 161
Jon Cafferen, 39
Jon Charlton, 234, 235
Jon Hogg, 75, 85
Jonos Arryn, 56
Jon Piper, 81
Jonquil Darke (Serpent in Scarlet, Scarlet Shadow), 112, 128, 161
Jonquil’s pool, 128, 139
Jon Rosby, 36
Jon Roxton, 248, 263, 266, 302, 309
Joseth Smallwood, 261
The Judgment of the Wolf, 293
Julian Wormwood, 280
K
Kermit Tully, 279, 287, 288, 316
The Kingdom of the Isles and the Rivers, 13
The Kingdom of the Three Daughters. See The Triarchy
The Kingsguard, 39, 45–47, 112, 201, 306, 307
King’s Landing, 31, 44, 45, 62, 63, 106, 107, 130, 131, 230, 254, 255, 274, 275, 278, 279, 286, 287
The King’s Peace, 43, 330
Kingspyre Tower, 210, 211
Kingsroad, Battle of the, 280
L
The Lads, 288, 290
Lady Forlorn (sword), 122, 300, 330
Laena Velaryon (daughter of Alyn
Oakenfist), 321, 328, 345
Laena Velaryon (daughter of Corlys), 166, 170, 183, 190–93, 196, 215, 222, 246, 300, 345
Laenor Velaryon, 170, 187, 189, 192–94, 196, 208, 223, 224, 245
Lannisport, 54, 55
Lannister, House, 16, 29, 164, 296. See also individual members
Lann the Clever, 16
Larra (of Lys) Rogare, 321, 323, 326–28, 331, 334–36, 339, 341, 344
Larys (The Clubfoot) Strong, 180–81, 195, 202, 204, 230, 232, 236, 240, 259, 269, 274, 278, 279, 283, 290, 292, 294
The Last Storm, 27, 28, 29
Leo Costayne (The Sea Lion), 325
Leowyn Corbray, 288, 296, 300, 304
Lodos, 34–36, 56
Lodos the Twice-Drowned, 56, 58
Longleaf the Lionslayer. See Pate of Longleaf
Lorcas the Learned, 103
Lorence Roxton, 112
Loren I Lannister, 15, 16, 29
Lorent Grandison, 338
Lorent Marbrand, 201, 207, 247, 254
Loreon Lannister, 301
Lothor Burley, 141
Lotho Rogare, 328, 334, 339–41
Lucamore Strong, 138, 152–53
Lucas Harroway, 63, 65, 77, 85, 86
Lucas Leygood, 308, 335, 336
Lucerys (Luke) Velaryon, 192, 193–96, 205–7, 209, 214–15, 298, 345
Lucifer Massey, 72
Lucinda Penrose, 339
Lucinda Tully, 101, 104, 113, 116
Luthor Largent, 204, 229–30, 247, 252, 253
Lyle Bracken, 72
Lyman Beesbury, 202–4, 218
Lyman Lannister, 73, 76, 81, 92, 107, 118–20
Lyonce, Grand Maester, 46
Lyonel Bentley, 268
Lyonel Deddings, 261, 264
Lyonel Hightower, 291–92, 295, 314, 338, 340
Lyonel Strong, 180, 185, 188, 195–96
Lysandro Rogare, 321, 323, 328, 334, 335
Lysaro Rogare, 334, 340
M
Mad Hal Hornwood, 295
Maegelle Targaryen, 149, 151, 161, 166, 169, 344
Maegor I (The Cruel) Targaryen
birth of, 50
Blackfyre and, 50, 63, 179
crowning of, 70–73
Dark Sister and, 50, 179
death of, 95
departure from King’s Landing by, 62, 63
at the Eyrie, 56, 57
as Hand of the King, 60
knighting of, 50
lineage of, 344
marriages of, 50, 63, 74, 75, 76, 92
at Oldtown, 78, 79, 81
personality of, 49–50
reign of, 71–95
tension between Aenys and, 63–66
Maegor’s Holdfast, 77, 86, 89, 128, 253, 280, 291, 316, 335, 336
Maegor Towers, 139, 152
Maelor Targaryen, 196, 217, 230, 236, 238, 345
Maiden of the Vale. See Jeyne Arryn
The Maiden’s Day Cattle Show, 318–19
Maladon Moore, 89, 93, 100
Malentine Velaryon, 298
Mallister, House, 211
Manfred Hightower, 30, 38–39, 63
Manfryd Mooton, 229, 296, 307, 315, 325
Manfryd Redwyne, 125, 142, 147, 163
Mara Martell, 158
Marilda of Hull, 224, 277, 298
Maris, Mother, 127
Marla Sunderland, 27, 35
Marq Ambrose, 266
Marq Farman, 82, 118
Marq Merryweather, 338
Marston Waters, 270, 274, 280, 291, 295, 296, 307, 334–37
Martyn Hightower, 78
Martyn Tyrell, 147
Mattheus, Septon, 113, 115, 126, 134
Medrick Manderly, 247, 295, 296, 301
Meleys, 153, 163, 166, 207, 209, 220–22, 270
Mellos, Grand Maester, 187, 188, 197
Melony Piper, 55, 81, 82
Meraxes, 26, 27, 36, 39, 40, 157
Meredyth Darklyn, 268
Meria Martell, 18, 30, 36, 39, 40
The Merman’s Court, 212, 213
Mern IX Gardener, 14–15, 16, 29, 30
Merrell Bullock, 116
Merryweather, House, 238. See also individual members
Mervyn Flowers, 307, 316, 334, 336, 339
Mirror Shield, 242, 243
Moon, Septon, 91, 92, 93, 101–4, 109, 113
Moondancer, 207, 223, 246, 270, 271
The Moon of the Three Kings, 259, 260, 273
Mooton, House, 211. See also individual members
Moredo Rogare, 328, 331, 333–34, 340
Morgan Hightower, 78, 81, 85
Morghul, 256
Morion Martell, 157–58
Morning, 279, 328, 331, 342
The Muddy Mess, 280, 281, 288
Munkun, Grand Maester, 202, 206, 212, 243, 254, 290, 292, 296, 298, 304, 307, 321, 328, 330, 336–38
Murmison, Septon, 63, 65
Mushroom, 187, 189, 193, 196, 197, 204, 206, 212, 220, 223, 240, 243, 246, 254, 259, 283, 291, 317, 318, 342
Myles Hightower, 291
Myles Smallwood, 136, 139
Myrielle Peake, 316, 318
Myros, Grand Maester, 76
Mysaria (The White Worm, Lady Misery), 180, 181, 217, 238, 247, 259
N
Ned Bean (Blackbean), 309
Nettles, 224, 243, 246–49, 254, 333
Night’s Watch, 46, 81, 107, 120, 126, 141, 142, 153, 293, 317, 325
The North, 17–18, 144
Nymeria, 18
Nymor Martell, 40
O
Oakenfist. See Alyn Velaryon
Oldtown, 38, 78, 79, 249
Ollidar, Grand Maester, 46
Olyver Bracken, 93, 120
Ormund Hightower, 207, 222, 226, 235, 236, 238, 241, 243–44, 248, 249, 267, 291, 302
Orphan-Maker, 263, 309
Orryn Baratheon, 113, 122, 126
Orwyle, Grand Maester, 197, 202, 203, 209, 229, 243, 259, 270, 273, 290, 292, 296, 298, 304, 307, 309
Orys Baratheon, 25–27, 29, 36, 38, 40, 45, 58, 59
Oscar Tully, 288, 295
Osmund Strong, 44, 46
Oswyck, Septon, 114, 126, 132
Otto Hightower, 173, 178, 180, 183, 185, 196, 202–4, 207, 209, 218, 224, 230, 236
Owain Bourney, 248
Owen Bush, 86, 89, 93, 100
Owen Fossoway, 266
P
The Painted Table, 23, 51, 136
Pantera, 327
Pate of Longleaf (Longleaf the Lionslayer), 229, 234, 240, 246
Pater, Septon, 81
Pate the Woodcock, 112
Patrise Hightower, 81
Peake, House, 308. See also individual members
Perianne Moore, 158, 161
Perkin the Flea, 254, 259, 274, 280, 290, 293
Pinkmaiden Castle, 81, 82
Piper, House, 211. See also individual members
The Poor Fellows, 65–66, 73, 75, 77, 78, 85, 91, 101, 102, 104, 107, 120
Prentys Tully, 109, 125
Priscella Hogg, 339
Q
Qarl Corbray, 109, 122, 125, 145
Qarl Correy, 189, 193
Qhored the Cruel, 13
Qhorin Volmark, 35–36
Qoren Martell, 218
Quenton Corbray, 330
Quenton Qoherys, 36, 55
Quicksilver, 49, 51, 55, 64, 66, 81, 82, 83
R
Racallio Ryndoon, 185, 297, 309, 312
Ragged Silas, 100, 101
Rayford Rosby, 72
Raymund Mallery, 93, 120
Raynard Ruskyn, 338
The Reach, 13–15
Red Keep, 44, 50–51, 77, 86, 88, 89
The Red Kraken. See Dalton Greyjoy
Red Robb Rivers, 232, 234
Red Roy Connington, 151, 158, 161
Reeds, Battle of the, 27
Regis Groves, 303–4
Rego Draz, 125, 126, 131, 136, 139, 145, 146, 147
Rennifer Crabb, 291
Rhaella Targaryen, 77, 92, 93, 104, 105, 107, 122, 126, 152, 344
Rhaena Targaryen (daughter of Aenys I), 50, 55, 63–66, 73, 76, 77, 81–82, 91–93, 99, 104, 107–9, 111, 112, 115, 118–20, 122, 127–28, 131–32, 134–36, 139, 152, 178–79, 193, 344
Rhaena Targaryen (daughter of Daemon), 191, 215, 222, 278, 279, 292, 300, 317, 320, 321, 325, 328, 331, 342, 345
Rhaenyra Targaryen, 176–77, 180–81, 185–89, 192–97, 201–4, 206–7, 209, 211, 212, 215, 217–18, 220, 222, 227, 229–32, 234–38, 240, 243–49, 253–54, 259, 261, 267–70, 272–74, 277–78, 287, 288, 290, 291, 296, 299, 300, 305, 321, 344
Rhaenys Targaryen (daughter of Aemon), 153, 163–66, 170, 183, 187, 191, 204–5, 207, 209, 220, 222, 345
Rhaenys Targaryen (sister of Aegon I), 22, 26–27, 29–30, 36, 39, 44, 49–50, 133, 345
Rhea Royce (Lady of Runestone), 179, 190, 345
Richard Roote, 46
Rickard Redwyne, 151
Rickard Thorne, 201, 230, 236, 238
Rickon Stark, 212, 214
Robar II Royce, 16
Robb Rivers, 232, 234
Robert Darklyn, 307
Robert Quince, 246, 268
Robert Redwyne, 147
Robert Rowan, 330–31, 333
Robin Darklyn (Darkrobin), 46
Robin Massey, 307, 309
Robin Shaw, 147
Roderick Dustin (Roddy the Ruin), 232, 240, 244
Rodrik Arryn, 147, 155, 157, 177, 344
Rodrik Greyjoy, 325, 326
Rogar Baratheon, 93, 99–100, 102, 107, 109, 111, 113, 115–17, 120–22, 126–27, 129, 134–35, 147–49, 345
Rogare, House, 323, 328, 333, 334, 339. See also individual members
Rogare Bank, 323, 328, 334, 336, 339
Roggerio Rogare, 328, 334, 339–41
Roland Westerling, 291, 295, 296, 304
Rollo, Septon, 127
Ronnal Baratheon, 122, 147
Ronnel Arryn, 16, 30, 31, 56
Roote, House, 211
Rosamund Ball, 116, 128
Royce Baratheon, 291
Royce Blackwood, 154
Royce Caron, 295, 296, 298, 307
Roy Connington, 151, 158, 161
Runciter, Grand Maester, 187
Runestone, 330, 331
Rupert Falwell (The Fighting Fool), 75
Ryam Redwyne, 142, 147, 169
S
Saagael, 327
Sabitha Frey, 240, 241, 261
Saera Targaryen, 149, 158, 160–62, 173, 344
Samantha Hightower (Lady Sam), 291–92, 295, 302–3, 314, 325, 338, 340
Samantha Stokeworth, 107, 118
Samgood of Sour Hill (Sour Sam), 112, 145
Sam Salt, 325
Sam Tarly, 58
Samwell Blackwood, 211, 217
Sandoq the Shadow, 334–35, 342
Sara Snow, 212
Sargoso Saan, 50
Scarlet Shadow. See Jonquil Darke
The Sealord of Braavos, 109, 133, 139, 190, 192, 309, 312, 315
Seasmoke, 208, 223, 226, 247, 248, 261, 264, 302
The Sea Snake. See Corlys Velaryon
Serpent in Scarlet. See Jonquil Darke
Serwyn of the Mirror Shield, 243
Seven Kingdoms, 7, 11–18, 41
Seven Stars, Battle of, 16
Sharako Lohar, 321
Sharis Footly, 248, 302
Sharra Arryn, 16, 27, 30
Sheepstealer, 208, 224, 226, 243, 246, 249, 333
The Shepherd, 248, 253–54, 256, 259, 273–74, 276, 277, 290, 309
The Shivers, 145, 147–48, 304
Shrykos, 256
Silverwing, 86, 93, 111, 141, 142, 143, 162, 169, 208, 223, 226, 244, 264, 266, 267, 268
Simon Strong, 211
Stanton Piper, 261, 264
Starry Sept, 30, 64, 81, 103, 104, 117, 134, 303
The Stars. See The Poor Fellows
Staunton, House, 220
Steffon Connington, 302, 317
Steffon Darklyn, 201, 205, 209, 223, 224–25, 268
Steffon Sunderland, 35
The Stepstones, 182–85, 190
The Stormbreakers, 295
Stormcloud, 207, 223, 226
Storm Kings, 11–12, 13, 18, 25–27, 41
The Stormlands, 11–12
Storm’s End, 11, 29, 215
Sun Chaser, 133
Sunfyre, 193, 207, 218, 220–22, 229, 243, 269–72
The Swords. See The Warrior’s Sons
Sylas the Grim, 317
Sylvenna Sand, 260, 274
Syrax, 176, 177, 178, 187, 193, 196, 207, 229, 243, 254, 256, 259
T
Targaryen, House. See also individual members
“dragonseeds” of, 142, 223
illness and, 147
lineage of, 344–45
marriage customs of, 21, 223
origins of, 7
physical appearance and, 26
Tarth, 166, 309, 311
Tessarion, 193, 207, 222, 226, 243–44, 246, 264
Tessario the Tiger, 308–11, 323, 334, 336, 339
Thaddeus Rowan, 222, 226, 235, 300, 307, 316, 321, 323, 325, 326, 335–37
Theo Bolling, 92
Theomore Manderly, 141, 151, 161–62
Theon Stark, 17
Theo Tyrell, 39
Timotty Snow, 295
Tom Tanglebeard, 246, 270, 283
Tom Tangletongue, 246, 270, 283
Tom the Strummer, 112
Tom Turnip, 158
Toron Greyjoy, 325
Torrhen Manderly, 247, 254, 295, 296, 301, 338, 339, 341–42
Torrhen Stark, 17, 18, 29–30, 35
The Trial of Seven, 71–73
The Triarchy (Kingdom of the Three Daughters), 183–85, 190, 218, 224, 226, 240, 295, 297, 321
Triston Massey, 45
Truth (sword), 328
Trystane Truefyre, 254, 259–60, 273–74
Tully, House, 295. See also individual members
Tumbleton, 260–61, 263–67
The Two Betrayers, 244, 246, 248, 260–61, 266
Tyanna of the Tower, 73, 76, 77, 81, 85–86, 92–95, 344
Tyland Lannister, 188, 202, 204, 230, 236, 259, 278–80, 291, 296–300, 304–5, 309, 316
Tymond Lannister, 155
Tyraxes, 192, 193, 207, 222, 223, 254, 256
U
Ulf White (Ulf the Sot), 223, 243–44, 246, 248, 261–63, 268
Ummet, 283
Unwin Peake, 248, 260–61, 266–67, 299, 307–9, 311, 312, 315–18, 320, 322, 323, 336, 338
Urron Greyiron, 13
V
Vaegon Targaryen, 149, 153–54, 156, 167, 170, 344
Vaella Targaryen, 63, 345
Vaemond Velaryon, 196, 299
Valaena Targaryen, 344
The Vale, 16
Valerion Targaryen, 344
Valyria, 6, 7, 21
Vance, House, 211
Velaryon, House, 26, 164, 218. See also individual members
Vermax, 192, 207, 212, 225, 228, 229
Vermithor, 86, 93, 100, 111, 125, 126, 131, 149, 158, 208, 223, 226, 244, 248, 261, 263–64, 302
Vhagar, 26, 27, 30, 35, 39, 51, 64, 71, 76, 78, 151, 158, 166, 183, 190, 191, 192, 193, 205, 207, 215, 220–22, 229, 236, 238, 240, 243, 246, 248, 251
Victor Risley, 308, 309, 336, 339
Victor the Valiant, 112, 145
Vikon Greyjoy, 36
Violante, Septa, 127
Visenya Targaryen (daughter of Rhaenyra), 206, 344
Visenya Targaryen (sister of Aegon I), 21, 30, 31, 35, 38–40, 44–46, 49, 50, 56, 58, 63–66, 71, 73, 76–78, 81–82, 85, 86, 151, 179, 344
Viserra Targaryen, 151, 161–63, 344
Viserys I Targaryen
Balerion and, 169, 170
birth of, 153
claim of, 170, 204
death of, 197, 201–2, 205
first flight of, 153, 154
lineage of, 345
reign of, 177–97
Viserys II Targaryen, 222, 224, 226, 321, 323, 327, 328–30, 334–36, 338, 341, 344
Viserys Targaryen (son of Aenys I), 50, 51, 66, 85, 86, 100, 345
The Vulture Hunt, 60, 61
Vulture Kings, 56, 58, 60, 120, 148–49, 157, 273
W
The Wall, 141–44
Walter Brownhill, 339
Walter Wyl, 58
Walton Stark, 109, 120, 121, 141
Walton Towers, 86
Walys Mooton, 229
The War of the Hundred Candles, 158, 159
The Warrior’s Sons, 65–66, 71–72, 75, 77, 78, 81, 85, 91, 100, 101, 104, 111, 120
Wat the Hewer, 73, 75, 76
Wat the Tanner, 254
The Westerlands, 15–16
Westeros, map of, 10
Willam Royce, 256
Willam Stackspear, 338
Willam the Wanderer, 72
Willam the Wasp, 112, 138
William Stafford (The Drunken Knight), 112
Willis Fell, 201, 230, 236, 273, 291, 295–96, 304
Winter Fever, 301, 304, 307, 309, 317, 325
The Winter Wolves, 234–35, 240, 243–44
The Wolf Pack, 295
Wyland Wyl, 317
Wyl of Wyl (The Widow-lover), 36, 38, 39
Y
Yndros of the Twilight, 327
Ysabel, Septa, 116, 127
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