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Chapter 40 - Chapter 40

The days passed quickly and peacefully after that. 

Ser Gerion vacated my quarters at Crakehall as promised, and I spent the rest of the nearly ten-day trip down the coast of the Reach sleeping, drinking enough water to clear my head, and drilling the lads on the deck. 

We'd done this before, years ago, back in Tarth, on one of Father's ships. I'd dragged all the older boys from my company out there, some ten of them, determined they'd get their sea legs on my terms before the world forced the lesson on them. 

Fighting on a ship was nothing like fighting on land. Your feet never stopped moving. The ship rolled under you, stealing balance when you weren't watching. Every step had to be earned.

I didn't know it from experience, but Father had seen some ship to ship action as a squire during the War of the Ninepenny. Later, with my grandfather dead on the field, Selwyn came back home from the war as a lord, married the Lady Addison Wylde, and had me all within a year of putting down Maelys the Monstrous.

Watching the lads these days, steadier than they'd been then, I knew I hadn't been wrong. The Ironborn near miss had spooked me more than I wished to admit. I needed to be ready at all times. A stressful way of living, yes, yet it was living still.

Like at Crakehall, we stopped at Old Oak near the Shield Islands for no more than a few hours, then again at Oakenshield, when the Lannister carrack needed to replace their lime barrels which had gone to rot, and at the small port town beneath House Blackbar's castle, Bandallon. 

We knew we were close to Oldtown before we ever spotted the city. At the mouth of the Whispering Sound, the sea changed. The water grew busier, thick with traffic, scores of fat-bellied cogs, patrol galleys flying Hightower and Redwyne colors, Essosi carracks, and I even saw one of the famed Summer Island's swan ships, its tall prow seeming to float over the water.

It was in the soft light of early dawn that we arrived at Oldtown proper. Mist clung to the Honeywine that morning, drifting in slow sheets as bells rang somewhere ahead, deep and distant. 

The city emerged piece by piece: pale walls rising from the fog, towers packed tight behind them, banners stirring lazily in the damp air.

And above it all, the Hightower.

A massive pale column banded with darker stone, its upper reaches swallowed by the clouds. A steady light burned near its crown, stubborn and bright even as the sun rose further into the western sky. 

I couldn't help the grin spreading across my face. It was one thing to hear about it from another's lips, or read it from a dusty old book a world away. Seeing it up close as it dominated everything else in view… 

I felt something stir deep within me. A rising need to act, to do great things. To leave a mark in this world, something permanent. I didn't think I'd be building towers anytime soon, but I'd be damned if I'd let my name be forgotten anytime soon.

Our ship slid along the bay traffic. Barges heavy with grain, fishing boats, sleek merchant vessels from all corners of the world. 

The Hightower loomed closer, its reflection breaking across the river's surface. I leaned against the rail, letting myself feel the breeze and the delightful stink of smoke and stone and people. I could hear shouts echoing across the water, oars splashing, the creak of rigging. 

We'd be staying at Oldtown for two nights. Ser Gerion had some business in the city and I was more than glad to acquiesce to his wishes. After a knight and a dockmaster boarded the Fair Winds to inspect our cargo and we set anchor at a dock that seemed a thousand times larger than Dawnrest, I went about my business.

Besides wanting to buy some gifts for my family and my innate need for sightseeing in a new medieval city, I had a couple of more serious endeavours to see to.

Jack and Jace had their own instructions: go to the Quill and Tankard where novices went to drink, make some friends, get some laughs, and sneakily find out if a man by the name of Qyburn still studied at the Citadel.

Meanwhile, Grey and myself would make a more formal trip to the maester's home. Not after Qyburn, as I wouldn't want to be publicly associated with him if he had already started his experiments, but to ask about a recent idea I had, of sending some of my boys to forge chains at the Citadel.

Later in the day, after we'd all completed our tasks, we agreed to meet back at an inn close to where the ship was berthed an hour before sunset. 

All in all, it promised to be a busy couple of days.

xxx

Ser Baelor Hightower

Baelor Hightower should've known it would be a queer day when, over a plate of quail eggs and bread, Malora asked to go into the city.

He almost missed it. 

They were breaking their fast in the small hall. This early in the morning, it was only the three of them, with their younger siblings still abed and sleeping. Even then, their father was already deep into his reading, going over reports of harbor levies and the newest complaints from the dockmasters, when Malora set her knife down with deliberate care and spoke.

"I would like to go into the city today."

Baelor looked up at once. Leyton Hightower paused mid-sentence. Even the servants waiting to refill their cups stilled. For a heartbeat, the only sound was the gulls outside and the faint creak of the tower settling into the morning.

"To the city," their father repeated, the lines in his face deepening.

"Yes, with an escort," Malora said. She waited a few moments before continuing, "It's important."

Baelor frowned at her words. He looked at their father, only to catch a strange gleam flashing across his eyes. He'd seen it before, and it made something clench in his chest. Despite their constant screaming arguments—and at times months of silent estrangement, Lord Leyton Hightower had an oddly close relationship with his eldest daughter.

Baelor only wished he could say the same. He and Malora were the only children of Lord Hightower's first marriage with Lady Bethally Bulwer, who died at childbirth when he was not quite three years old. 

He never felt such a sense of duty as he did when he first held baby Malora. With their mother dead and their father often occupied by lordly matters, he grew up determined to be there for his sister as much as he could. 

He remembered the small things most clearly. Walking her to her stitching lessons when she begged to hold his hand. Sitting through lectures meant for younger children so she would not be alone. Letting her hide behind him when their father's temper flared, and later taking the blame when a book went missing or a candle burned too low. 

Yet something changed not long after Baelor became a squire. At first, he thought it was simply ill-timing. He was occupied with his duties to his knight while his sister had to focus on her studies and classes. But time passed and things were never the same.

His lord father and sister grew closer over their books and scrolls and he was left to the side. For years now, Baelor Hightower felt a stranger in his own family. Lord Leyton loved him in his own way, he knew that, and even Malora, with all her eccentricities, did not mislike him. 

But after childhood, he never had the kind of connection his sister and father shared, with their loud feuds and secret discussions, or their other siblings, who shared mothers and friendships between each other.

Baelor had tried all he could to rekindle the bond they had, but Malora seemed determined to ignore him. At the very least, he knew it wasn't only him Malora ignored. If anything, at this point, he worried more about her well-being than their own broken relationship.

The silence in the solar lengthened, and Baelor waited for Lord Leyton's refusal. Or the questions. Or some tired deflections that usually followed any silly requests his other sisters made.

Instead, his father turned his head slightly and looked at him.

"Baelor," he said. "You'll take her."

Baelor blinked. "Me?"

"You," Leyton confirmed, already reaching for his cup again. "Take a few men. Don't let her stray from your sight and come back before nightfall."

That was all.

Malora did not look at Baelor, dark hair covering the sides of her face from where he sat. She had already returned to her bread, as though the matter had never been in doubt. As though she had known the answer before she asked.

Baelor felt a flicker of unease, but it was smothered by a more familiar concern. His sister had scarcely left the tower in months. Years, if he was honest with himself. If this was how she chose to break that isolation, he would not be the one to deny her.

He rose when she did.

xxx

They walked through Oldtown until Baelor lost any sense of direction. 

He thought he knew the city as well as the pommel of his own sword. But truly, he was accustomed to the broad streets by the harbor, the grand avenues leading to the Starry Sept and the Citadel, or the famous bridges connecting the bigger islands dotting the Honeywine.

Malora did not seem to want to frequent these places. They trekked through crookback streets with wooden housing that seemed near to tip over, through tight warrens where drying clothes hanging from lines dripped water overhead, through narrow lanes where refuse clung to the gutters and the air smelled of ale and piss and worse. 

Through it all, his sister walked with purpose, pace steady, her gaze fixed ahead, as if the city were arranging itself to her expectations. She did not speak a single word to him.

After the first hour, Baelor assumed she was perhaps heading toward one of the smaller septs hidden in the city maze and simply lost her way. After the second, he began to wonder if she wasn't the one that was simply wandering. But she never hesitated, never slowed, never glanced back.

By the third, his patience thinned.

"Malora," he said at last, keeping his voice even. "Do you know where you're going?"

"Yes," she replied without turning.

Baelor frowned. "Where?"

"I will know him," she said. "When I see him."

That made him stop walking. "Him?" Baelor repeated. "Who is him?"

She glanced at him then, briefly. Her expression was calm. Certain. Entirely untroubled by his confusion.

She did not answer. She just started walking again, and Baelor followed, unsettled in a way he could not quite name.

xxx

Beyond the flourishing apple tree sitting by the river, the Quill and Tankard did not stand out in any way amongst the dozens of inns they'd passed throughout the morning. 

Yet Malora went to it the moment she saw its distinctive sign, crossing the old plank bridge uncaring of her hem brushing against the muddy ground.

The front door creaked when she pushed it open. Inside, the common room was crowded with young men, many dressed like novices from the Citadel, as well as sailors and some merchants' sons. Laughter rippled unevenly across the room. Someone cursed over spilled ale.

Conversation dipped immediately as soon as they were noticed. With Malora's fine clothes, Baelor's enamelled armor polished to brilliance, and their guards' Hightower surcoats, it was clear they did not belong.

Baelor stepped in behind Malora, their men-at-arms fanning to either side. His sister stood still, eyes moving slowly across the room.

The innkeeper, a portly woman with tiny freckles dancing across her pleasant face, hurried from behind the bar and went low into a curtsy. 

"M'lord, m'lady," she said, throat bobbing with nerves. "How—how may I serve you?"

Before Baelor could answer the anxious woman, Malora went rigid.

She ignored the question and crossed the tavern in a straight line, skirts whispering, stopping at a table near the back where five young men sat. Two of them were unmistakably twins, alike in their tanned faces, burly build, and the guarded way they watched her approach.

"You," Malora said, voice clear and commanding. "Leave."

The table erupted into motion. Benches scraped. Five men stood at once, rushing to obey a lady's order.

She pointed a finger. "Not you," she said. "Sit."

The twins froze. Baelor felt every gaze in the room swing toward them.

Malora leaned slightly forward, studying the twins as if they were some broken line in one of her books, something that did not quite match the narrative.

"What is the name of your lord?" she asked.

Confusion flashing across their faces. They denied, pleaded ignorance, swore they did not want to meddle in highborn business. Baelor almost felt bad for the two. He would have believed them entirely had he not seen Malora's eyes.

She nodded once. "I see."

Then she sat. Simply sat down at their table, folding her hands in her lap as if she belonged there.

The twins exchanged a glance. One shifted, preparing to stand.

"Brother," Malora said.

Baelor stiffened at once.

"Do not let them leave," she continued, still not looking at him. "Any of them."

The guards moved without hesitation, positioning themselves at doors and between tables. The tavern goers all murmured to each other, tension rippling outward like a stone dropped into a still pond.

One of the twins swallowed. "M'lady, there's no need for any of this."

Malora seemed unconcerned about the man's discomfort. "If you will not tell me," she said, "then I will wait."

She leaned back slightly, eyes bright now, fixed on the door as if she expected it to open at any moment.

"He will come," she added. "I know he will."

A chill ran through Baelor. He did not know who she meant. He did not know how she could be so sure this someone, this him, would come. But as he watched his sister sit there—utterly composed, utterly certain—he confirmed something he should've already known.

Malora had not come into Oldtown on a whim. She had learned something new in her studies, something that moved her enough to leave her gloomy rooms in the Hightower. The answer, it seemed, laid at the feet of this stranger. 

xxx

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