The valley of the Thenn still slled of smoke and blood.
Snow that had once glead untouched beneath the winter sun was now churned into dark slush by thousands of boots, hooves, and bodies. Broken spears lay half-buried in frost. Shields splintered by axes protruded like grave markers. Ravens circled overhead, bold now that the clash of steel had faded.
And yet, despite the devastation, the banners of the North still flew proudly.
Direwolves of House Stark, the rman of White Harbor, the sunburst of Karstark, the axes of the Umbers—all fluttered in the cold wind as if declaring to the world that the North had prevailed.
Near the center of the encampnt stood Eddard Stark, wrapped in a heavy cloak, his expression grave rather than triumphant.
Around him, however, celebration had begun.
Ale flowed. Fires were lit. Soldiers laughed loudly—too loudly—relief and adrenaline spilling out after days of tension and a brutal fight.
“We did it!” shouted a young Umber warrior, lifting a horn of ale. “The Thenn are finished!”
“A hard fight though,” another replied. “Seven hells, I’ve never seen savages hold a line like that.”
“They weren’t just savages,” muttered a Karstark veteran quietly. “They fought like trained soldiers.”
Eddard heard that. He agreed—but said nothing.
Because the truth sat heavy on his conscience.
Yes, they had won.
But the victory had cost them dearly.
A thousand northern n lay dead.
Many more would never fight again.
And still… sothing about it did not feel finished.
“Lord Stark.”
Eddard turned. It was Ser Wendel Manderly, his armor still stained with blood, helm tucked under his arm.
“We’ve combed most of the valley,” Wendel reported. “Destroyed their war bands. Burned their houses and food stores. But…”
“But?” Eddard prompted.
“No children,” Wendel said. “No elderly. Hardly any won either.”
Eddard frowned.
“That makes no sense,” he said.
“The Thenn are proud people,” another lord interjected—Greatjon Umber, massive and blunt as always. “They wouldn’t hide their kin. They’d fight beside them.”
“Unless soone moved them,” Eddard said quietly.
That suggestion silenced the gathered lords.
“Moved?” Umber scoffed. “By who? The wildlings scattered.”
“Exactly,” Eddard replied. “Which is why this troubles .”
He looked out toward the mountains surrounding the valley.
“It’s as if they knew we were coming,” he added.
Over the next two days, patrols spread outward.
Rangers combed caves, forests, abandoned settlents, even frozen riverbeds. Dogs were brought to track scent. Scouts climbed ridges to look for smoke.
Nothing.
No refugees.
Frustration began to replace triumph.
“We didn’t co all this way to half-finish the job,” grumbled Lord Glover during one council eting.
“The threat must be ended completely,” said another.
Eddard did not like that phrasing—but he understood the sentint. Northern villages had suffered raids for centuries. Fear ran deep.
Still, sothing in his gut told him the story wasn’t over.
One afternoon, scouts returned dragging three prisoners—mbers of a small cannibal clan.
They had tried to ambush a supply train.
It ended quickly.
Northern steel was superior. Discipline stronger. Hunger and desperation made poor tactics.
By sunset, that clan too was gone.
And still, the mystery of the missing Thenn lingered.
It happened at dusk on the fifth day after the battle.
Snow was beginning to fall again when the horn at the outer picket sounded—one long blast, not alarm but announcent.
“A rider!” ca the cry.
n gathered instinctively as a lone horse approached through the falling snow, foam at its mouth from hard riding. The rider wore Stark colors beneath a Night’s Watch cloak—an unusual combination.
Eddard stepped forward imdiately.
The rider dismounted stiffly and bowed.
“My lord… ssage from Winterfell.”
He handed over a sealed letter bearing Lord Rickard Stark’s sigil.
Eddard broke it open.
As he read, his expression slowly changed—not shock exactly, but deep concern.
“What is it?” Wendel asked.
Eddard looked up.
“It seems,” he said slowly, “the wildlings we were ant to fight… have largely left this land.”
Murmurs spread.
“Left?” Umber barked. “Where?”
“Essos,” Eddard replied.
That caused outright laughter from so soldiers.
“Wildlings crossing the Narrow Sea?” soone scoffed. “Impossible.”
“Apparently not,” Eddard said quietly. “Ships have been sighted. Large numbers. Settlents forming.”
The laughter faded.
“Who organized them?” Wendel asked.
Eddard folded the letter carefully.
“That,” he said, “is the troubling part.”
He hesitated, then continued:
“No one knows.”
The war had ended not with a final battle… but with absence.
That truth settled uneasily over Eddard as the northern banners began their slow march south from the lands beyond the Wall. No horns sounded victory. No songs were sung of conquest. There was relief, yes — imnse relief — but also a quiet dissatisfaction that lingered like a bruise beneath the skin.
The wildlings were simply… gone.
No last stand. No decisive triumph. No enemy to defeat.
Just empty valleys, abandoned fires, and rumors carried on the wind.
“Feels strange, doesn’t it?” muttered Jon Umber, riding beside Eddard. “All that preparation… all that talk of war… and now nothing.”
Eddard nodded slowly.
“It feels unfinished,” he admitted. “Like closing a book before the final chapter.”
Umber snorted.
“I’ll take unfinished over dead sons.”
That, Eddard could not argue with.
Around them, the army stretched for miles — armored warriors, mounted nobles, common infantry, wagons full of supplies. Many soldiers were already in good spirits. The thought of ho ward them more than any fire could.
“They left for Essos, they say,” one Karstark rider said nearby.
“Madness,” another replied. “Wildlings sailing seas? Never thought I’d live to hear it.”
Eddard remained silent.
But privately, a mory stirred.
The Magnar of Thenn.
His stubborn pride.
His talk about soone who ca before offering prosperity.
Soone who had already begun reshaping the world beyond the Wall.
He pushed that thought away. Speculation helped no one.
When Castle Black finally ca into view, the entire army visibly relaxed.
Even hardened warriors sighed.
The towering Wall — though visibly thinning — still provided a psychological comfort impossible to describe. It had guarded the North for thousands of years. Seeing it again felt like stepping back into civilization.
As the gates opened, the Night’s Watch brothers lined the passage.
Not grim this ti.
Lord Commander white-haired but still broad-shouldered, stepped forward personally to greet Eddard.
“Lord Stark,” he said warmly. “You’ve done us a great service.”
Eddard dismounted and clasped the old man’s forearm.
“It seems the danger resolved itself,” Eddard replied modestly.
Flynn chuckled.
“I won’t complain. Fewer enemies ans fewer graves.”
He gestured toward Castle Black.
“We’ve prepared a feast. The Watch owes the North more than words.”
That evening, Castle Black — once bleak and austere — felt almost festive.
Long tables filled the courtyard. Barrels of ale stood open. Fresh bread, salted ats, stews, and even sweets appeared in quantities the Watch rarely enjoyed.
Recent support from northern houses had changed things.
They were no longer starving sentinels forgotten by the realm.
And tonight, they wanted to show gratitude.
“To the North!” shouted one black brother.
“To the Watch!” ca the reply.
Eddard raised his cup but drank sparingly. Celebration sat oddly with him.
Flynn joined him quietly.
“You’re troubled,” the Lord Commander observed.
“A little,” Eddard admitted.
“The missing clans?”
“Yes.”
Flynn nodded knowingly.
“I’ve seen many wars, Stark. Sotis the enemy disappearing is better than defeating them. Less blood.”
“Perhaps,” Eddard said. “But disappearance implies agency. Soone led them.”
Flynn’s expression darkened slightly.
“You think the stories are true? About the king beyond the Wall?”
Eddard did not answer directly.
“I think the world is changing faster than we understand.”
That seed answer enough.
The next morning, the northern army resud its journey south.
And almost imdiately, the change beca obvious.
The Gift, once perpetually cold wasteland, now showed signs of thriving life.
Green shoots pushed through soil earlier than expected. Fields of barley and rye swayed gently in winds that no longer bit like knives.
Farrs waved cheerfully as the army passed.
“Never seen crops like this,” one elderly farr called out. “Winters used to kill half of it. Now look!”
Another soldier murmured:
“The cold really is easing.”
Eddard studied the land carefully.
This was not rely seasonal fluctuation.
Sothing fundantal had shifted.
By the ti they reached the southernmost watchtower, the evidence was undeniable.
The Wall was lting. Water trickled down its ancient face in narrow rivulets. Massive chunks of ice had already fallen away.
Even the most stoic northerners fell silent.
“That Wall stood eight thousand years,” whispered a young knight. “And now…”
“No wall lasts forever,” Flynn said quietly, having ridden out to accompany them partway south.
There was little anyone could do.
No army could stop lting ice. No engineering project could preserve sothing so ancient and vast.
So they accepted it.
As northerners always had.
With quiet resilience.
“Well,” Umber said gruffly neutralizing the heavy mood, “if winters get milder, maybe my beard won’t freeze every bloody year.”
That earned laughter.
As Winterfell finally approached days later, the mood lifted dramatically.
n spoke of families. Of hearth fires. Of rest.
Eddard himself felt the pull of ho strongly now.
Yet a part of him remained unsettled.
He could not shake the sense that history itself was turning a page.
And the North — whether it wished to or not — would soon be forced to read what ca next.
The army halted first at Winterstown — the sprawling settlent outside the castle walls where rchants, craftsn, farrs, and travelers gathered. It was here that armies usually disbanded after campaigns. Lords would dismiss their levies, n would return to their villages, and life would resu its rhythm.
But this ti… sothing felt different.
Before the banners were even lowered, before armor was unbuckled, before the first mug of ale was raised in relief — a sound drifted across the crowded streets.
Singing.
A celebration.
A group of townsfolk stood near a tavern hearth, voices rising together. A traveling bard plucked a lute while others joined the chorus. The lody was haunting yet triumphant.
“A wolf crossed seas where the First n bled,
Red roots planted where Andals tread,
Steel he carried, old gods’ grace,
And vengeance grew in a foreign place…”
Soldiers slowed their steps.
So smiled, assuming it was just another northern war ballad.
But the lyrics grew more specific.
“He took the lost beyond the Wall,
Gave them ships, gave them call,
From frozen wastes to southern soil,
The wolf reclaid what once was spoil.”
Eddard frowned slightly.
“That’s… oddly precise,” he murmured.
Jon Umber laughed.
“Sounds like the sort of tale bards make after a victory.”
Curiosity eventually pulled several nobles — including Eddard — into the nearest tavern where the singing continued. The place was packed. rchants, farrs, returned soldiers, stable boys — everyone seed energized.
A middle-aged smith, clearly several drinks deep, slapped Eddard on the shoulder before realizing who he was.
“My lord Stark! Welco ho!”
“Thank you,” Eddard said politely. “Tell … what is that song about?”
The smith blinked.
“You an you don’t know?”
“That is precisely why I am asking.”
The man laughed incredulously.
“Your brother, my lord! Brandon Stark! The Wolf of Andalos!”
The tavern quieted slightly as people realized Lord Stark himself was listening.
Another man spoke eagerly.
“He sailed east! Took thousands of wildlings with him. Claid land in Andalos. Planted weirwood trees where the Andals once cut ours down.”
A woman added:
“They say it’s revenge for the ancient wars. A Stark bringing the old gods presence in Essos.”
Murmurs of approval rippled through the crowd.
Eddard absorbed the information slowly.
“Wildlings… in Essos?” he repeated.
“Yes, my lord,” said a younger trader. “News from Braavos confird it. Entire fleets of fur-cloaked northerners settled in Andalos.”
“And Brandon leads them?”
“That’s what everyone says.”
Soone else chid in:
“And no more wildling raids! They’ve all gone east!”
That drew loud cheers.
For generations, wildlings had been the North’s constant worry. The idea that they were gone — truly gone — lifted a weight people hadn’t realized they carried.
Umber leaned close to Eddard.
“Funny, isn’t it?” he muttered. “Six months ago half the North called Brandon a honorless fool. Now he’s a legend.”
Eddard gave a tight smile.
“People admire results.”
Another lord approached cautiously.
“My lord Stark… forgive my bluntness… but your brother has done sothing remarkable. Not just removing the wildling threat — but claiming land. Expanding northern influence.”
“Influence,” Eddard repeated softly.
“Yes. It gives the North prestige. Independence, almost.”
The implication hung heavily.
Later, outside the tavern, Eddard stood alone for a mont.
Snow fell lightly — softer than usual winters.
His brother alive, successful, even celebrated…
That should have brought uncomplicated pride.
And part of him was proud.
Brandon had always been bold. Charismatic. Capable of inspiring loyalty.
If anyone could unite wildlings, it would be him.
But another feeling crept in.
Displacent.
Eddard had led a massive expedition north. Risked thousands of lives. Fought brutal battles.
Yet history would rember…
Brandon.
The man who removed the threat entirely.
Umber noticed Eddard’s silence.
“You’re brooding.”
“I’m thinking.”
“About Brandon?”
“Yes.”
Umber shrugged.
“No sha in it. He did sothing big. So did you. North needed both.”
Eddard exhaled slowly.
“I just wish I understood how he managed it.”
“Well,” Umber said dryly, “so wolves fight. Others… apparently plant trees.”
Despite himself, Eddard chuckled.
Back inside, several northern lords debated animatedly.
“If Brandon truly holds Andalos,” said Lord Manderly’s representative, “trade routes could open.”
“Or wars,” countered another.
“Southron lords already whisper treason.”
“Let them,” said a Karstark bluntly. “Better Stark strength than southern interference.”
Eddard finally spoke:
“No reckless conclusions. Brandon’s actions affect more than the North. Essos politics are complicated. So are southern reactions.”
By the ti Lord Rickard Stark arrived at Winterstown, the celebrations had grown louder, more crowded, and more complicated. Fires burned in iron braziers along the streets, soldiers shared ale with townsfolk, and rchants had already begun selling small wooden wolf carvings to commorate the expedition beyond the Wall.
Yet beneath the festivity lingered sothing unsettled.
The songs about Brandon still drifted through taverns.
The news of wildlings crossing the sea still circulated.
And the returning army — though victorious — had not returned with the glorious conquest many had expected.
Rickard Stark understood all of it the mont he rode through the settlent.
And he knew exactly how to handle it.
Word spread quickly:
“Lord Stark is calling the army to assemble.”
Within an hour, the remaining soldiers gathered in the large clearing outside Winterstown — banners fluttering, armor still dusty from travel, faces tired but attentive.
Eddard stood among his bannern, watching his father approach the makeshift platform. Rickard Stark looked older than when Eddard had left, but the authority in his bearing remained unchanged — calm, deliberate, unshakable.
This was not a man who ruled through spectacle.
He ruled through certainty.
Rickard raised his hand, and the murmurs died almost instantly.
“My sons of the North,” he began, voice carrying clearly despite the cold air, “you left your hos not for glory, not for conquest… but for protection.”
A pause.
“You marched beyond the Wall because the world was changing. Because the Wall itself was changing. And because we would never allow the North to be caught unprepared.”
Heads nodded across the crowd.
That much, everyone understood.
Rickard’s tone softened.
“Many of you returned. So did not.”
The silence deepened.
“I will not insult their sacrifice with grand tales or exaggerated victories. They fought. They endured. And they ensured the North remains safe.”
Behind him, several stewards brought forward scrolls.
“Every family who lost a son, a father, a brother… will receive compensation as promised. Land where possible. Coin where needed. Protection always.”
That statent drew a low murmur of approval.
In the North, promises kept mattered more than stirring speeches.
Rickard did not ntion Brandon.
Not once.
No reference to Andalos.
No acknowledgnt of the migration east.
No speculation about wildlings leaving.
Eddard noticed it imdiately.
And he understood why.
Whatever Brandon had achieved — it had not been sanctioned by the North. Publicly tying House Stark’s authority to that venture could complicate alliances, provoke southern suspicion, or even invite unwanted political entanglents.
Rickard was protecting the North by staying silent.
Rickard straightened.
“The expedition is concluded. Your duty is fulfilled. Return to your hos. Rebuild what winter took. Raise your children in peace.”
He looked across the assembled ranks.
“And rember this: the strength of the North is not in conquest. It is in endurance.”
That line stayed with many long after the speech ended.
Soon after, officers began distributing pay.
Coin clinked into gloved hands.
Receipts were marked.
Nas recorded.
Families of fallen soldiers were quietly escorted aside, given sealed pouches heavier than most expected.
So wept in relief.
Others simply nodded — grief mixed with gratitude.
By evening, the great army that had marched beyond the Wall ceased to exist.
n mounted horses.
Wagons rolled out.
Banners disappeared one by one.
Eddard barely waited.
As soon as formalities ended, he saddled his horse.
Rickard noticed.
“Winterfell?” his father asked.
“Yes.”
Rickard gave a rare, gentle smile.
“Your children have been counting days.”
Eddard nodded, emotion flickering across his usually controlled expression.
“I promised them stories.”
Rickard chuckled quietly.
“Make sure you tell them the truth. Not the songs.”
He barely dismounted before two small figures ran across the courtyard.
“Father!”
Robb reached him first, crashing into his legs with the enthusiasm only a young boy possessed.
Sansa followed more gracefully but with equal eagerness, wrapping her arms around him.
“You were gone forever,” she accused softly.
“Only a little while,” Eddard replied, kneeling so he could hold them both properly.
Gods, they had grown.
Children always did while fathers were away at war.
Author's Note:
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