A Feast for Crows

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Book: Read A Feast for Crows for Free Online
Authors: George R.R. Martin
he would dance (but not the finger dance, never again), he would jape and jabber and make mock. He played the pipes, he juggled, he rode horses, and could drink more than all the Wynches and the Botleys, and half the Harlaws too. The Drowned God gives every man a gift, even him; no man could piss longer or farther than Aeron Greyjoy, as he proved at every feast. Once he bet his new longship against a herd of goats that he could quench a hearthfire with no more than his cock. Aeron feasted on goat for a year, and named the longship
Golden Storm,
though Balon threatened to hang him from her mast when he heard what sort of ram his brother proposed to mount upon her prow.
    In the end the
Golden Storm
went down off Fair Isle during Balon’s first rebellion, cut in half by a towering war galley called
Fury
when Stannis Baratheon caught Victarion in his trap and smashed the Iron Fleet. Yet the god was not done with Aeron, and carried him to shore. Some fishermen took him captive and marched him down to Lannisport in chains, and he spent the rest of the war in the bowels of Casterly Rock, proving that krakens can piss farther and longer than lions, boars, or chickens.
    That man is dead.
Aeron had drowned and been reborn from the sea, the god’s own prophet. No mortal man could frighten him, no more than the darkness could . . . nor memories, the bones of the soul.
The sound of a door opening, the scream of a rusted iron hinge. Euron has come again.
It did not matter. He was the Damphair priest, beloved of the god.
    “Will it come to war?” asked Greydon Goodbrother as the sun was lightening the hills. “A war of brother against brother?”
    “If the Drowned God wills it. No godless man may sit the Seastone Chair.”
The Crow’s Eye will fight, that is certain.
No woman could defeat him, not even Asha; women were made to fight their battles in the birthing bed. And Theon, if he lived, was just as hopeless, a boy of sulks and smiles. At Winterfell he proved his worth, such that it was, but the Crow’s Eye was no crippled boy. The decks of Euron’s ship were painted red, to better hide the blood that soaked them.
Victarion. The king must be Victarion, or the storm will slay us all.
    Greydon left him when the sun was up, to take the news of Balon’s death to his cousins in their towers at Downdelving, Crow Spike Keep, and Corpse Lake. Aeron continued on alone, up hills and down vales along a stony track that drew wider and more traveled as he neared the sea. In every village he paused to preach, and in the yards of petty lords as well. “We were born from the sea, and to the sea we all return,” he told them. His voice was as deep as the ocean, and thundered like the waves. “The Storm God in his wrath plucked Balon from his castle and cast him down, and now he feasts beneath the waves in the Drowned God’s watery halls.” He raised his hands. “
Balon is dead! The king is dead!
Yet a king will come again! For what is dead may never die, but rises again, harder and stronger!
A king will rise!

    Some of those who heard him threw down their hoes and picks to follow, so by the time he heard the crash of waves a dozen men walked behind his horse, touched by god and desirous of drowning.
    Pebbleton was home to several thousand fisherfolk, whose hovels huddled round the base of a square towerhouse with a turret at each corner. Twoscore of Aeron’s drowned men there awaited him, camped along a grey sand beach in sealskin tents and shelters built of driftwood. Their hands were roughened by brine, scarred by nets and lines, callused from oars and picks and axes, but now those hands gripped driftwood cudgels hard as iron, for the god had armed them from his arsenal beneath the sea.
    They had built a shelter for the priest just above the tideline. Gladly he crawled into it, after he had drowned his newest followers.
My god,
he prayed,
speak to me in the rumble of the waves, and tell me what to do. The captains and the kings await

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