The raven’s ssage from the King's landing had changed everything.
Within a day of the news spreading through Winterfell, the entire castle seed to tremble with movent. Servants hurried to air unused chambers, polish silver, and heat new bathhouses for the royal guests. Hunters were sent into the Wolfswood for fresh ga; the kitchens smoked with preparations that would last for weeks.
But the greatest change of all fell upon Benjen Stark and Daecy Mormont, whose long-awaited wedding was suddenly postponed.
“It would be disrespectful to wed before the King arrives,” Lord Rickard declared in council, his tone leaving no room for argunt. “The dragon cos north for our honor. We’ll not give him reason to claim we rushed our vows like smallfolk.”
Benjen tried to hide his disappointnt, though Lyanna saw it plainly. “Then we wait,” he said simply. “But I’ll not have half the North think I’m trembling at the sight of a crown.”
Rickard gave him a rare smile. “No one who’s t a Mormont bride will ever accuse you of fear, my son.”
That earned laughter, easing the tension — but only for a mont.
For the delay ant ti — and ti ant talk.
In the days that followed, Winterfell filled with voices. Every lord who had co early for the wedding now used the postponent for politics.
Old rivalries were rekindled, grievances brought forth, and alliances whispered in corners. The Great Hall beca a sea of murmured conversations and clinking goblets.
Lord Umber thundered complaints about taxes on timber shipnts; Lord Glover argued about fishing rights near the Rills. Even Lord Ryswell found reason to flatter and threaten in the sa breath.
And through it all, Lyanna Gryffindor moved among them like a quiet storm.
The lords bowed when she passed, their words courteous, their eyes calculating. More than once she was stopped by a well-dressed nobleman or his lady wife, each carrying the sa polished smile.
“Your Grace,” said one Riverlord whose na she forgot the mont he spoke, “your son must be quite the prodigy. To think — a prince of Narnia, heir to such a realm. My granddaughter is of noble birth and gentle nature. Perhaps, in ti—”
Lyanna cut him short with a polite smile. “Narnia does not bind its children before they can speak for themselves. When Sirius chooses his heart, it will be his own choice, not his mother’s.”
The lord blinked, taken aback. “You an… no betrothals?”
“It’s not our way,” she said, and continued walking before he could stamr another word.
But the questions kept coming. Every lord with a daughter or niece of suitable age tried his luck. Even the proudest northern houses — the Karstarks, the Ryswells, the Tallharts — spoke of it quietly, as though Sirius were a treasure to be bartered.
Sirius, of course, remained blissfully unaware of most of it.
The boy had quickly beco the darling of Winterfell. He had his mother’s charecter and his father’s energy, and none of the restraint of either. By dawn he was out in the yard, climbing the battlents with Robb Stark at his heels, or leading a gang of children through the courtyards on grand “expeditions.”
When the lords ca to speak with Lyanna, they often found their sons and daughters laughing in the yard with her boy — hair tousled, cheeks red from the cold.
One morning, Lord Wyman Manderly watched Sirius running across the snow, a wooden sword in one hand and a direwolf trotting beside him. The great old lord shook his head in wonder.
“That one’s got more life in him than half the realm,” he said.
Lyanna smiled faintly. “He’s his father’s son. The gods help .”
It wasn’t long before Sirius beca the most talked-about child in the North.
When he told the gathered n at supper that his wolf, Godric, was not the only one of his kind — that six direwolf pups still lived in Narnia — the entire hall had gone silent.
“There are more?” Lord Glover asked incredulously.
Sirius nodded, grinning. “Six. They’re all still young, though — my father says they’ll grow into hunters soon.”
The lords exchanged glances. To them, the direwolf was a sigil, a symbol older than kings — and here sat a boy of five who spoke of them as household pets.
Robb, sitting beside him, could barely contain himself. “Could I have one?” he blurted out.
Sirius looked uncertain. “You’d have to ask Father first. He says the wolves choose who they want, not the other way around.”
Robb’s eyes widened. “Then I’ll make one choose !”
Laughter rolled through the room. Even Eddard smiled.
Lord Rickard watched the exchange with quiet amusent but also with sothing deeper — a spark of pride and worry intertwined. The boy was more than his grandson; he was proof that the blood of Winterfell ran through far-off lands, that even across the sea, the wolves endured.
As the days passed, Winterfell’s courtyards transford into the domain of the children.
Sirius taught them strange Narnian gas. The northern children adored him, his confidence and curiosity winning them all over.
He was clever, mischievous, and far too bold for his age. Once, when a lord’s son boasted that no child could hit the target dummy with a bow, Sirius simply smiled and sent the arrow flying dead-center — then shrugged when they stared. “If you want I can hit it again,” he said.
Lyanna tried to scold him, but she could never quite hide her smile.
The days in Winterfell had grown slower now that the wedding was postponed. The great lords spoke politics in warm halls, but Sirius, restless as the wind, preferred the courtyards and the open road.
He had explored every tower, every stairway, and every secret passage his sharp eyes could find. Even the kennels, the blacksmith’s forge, and the old crypts beneath the castle had not escaped his curiosity. But once he had seen everything worth seeing, boredom crept in like frost through stone.
So one morning, when the air was crisp and the snow only ankle-deep, Sirius saddled his direwolf and slipped out through the gates. His guards trailed close behind, half in amusent, half in panic, for no one in Winterfell dared stop the Queen of Narnia’s son when he declared he was going on an adventure.
They followed him all the way down the sloping path to Wintertown — the small, lively village nestled at the castle’s base.
Word spread fast that morning: the little prince from across the sea was walking the streets of Wintertown. The smallfolk peeked through shutters and doorways as Sirius rode through the snow-dusted lanes, his cheeks pink from the cold, his black hair whipping about in the wind.
When a baker offered him a sweetroll, Sirius slid from his wolf and bowed slightly, as if greeting a noblewoman. “Thank you, ma’am,” he said sincerely before taking a bite. “This is better than the honey cakes back ho.”
The woman blinked, startled. “Back ho?”
“In Narnia,” he said proudly.
The baker only gaped, but her young son tugged at Sirius’s cloak. “Are you a prince, ser?”
Sirius crouched down until they were eye to eye. “Sothing like that,” he said with a grin. “But princes are boring. I’d rather be a hero.”
The boy’s eyes widened. “Like in the songs?”
“Better,” Sirius whispered. “Like in Narnia.”
By afternoon, half the children of Wintertown had followed him into the square. So carried wooden swords, others snowballs. The mothers tried to shoo them ho, but even they lingered near the doors, smiling as the foreign prince sat cross-legged on a bench and began to tell stories.
He spoke of Thor, the hamr-wielding god who made thunder sound like laughter, and Loki, who turned into a fish just to steal one of Thor’s boots - and the children listened as if the sky itself had opened to let them dream.
When one boy asked, “Do your gods have faces carved in trees, like ours?” Sirius smiled softly, "I think the old gods here can hear them, if the wind’s right.”
When his guards finally caught up, Sirius was standing in the middle of the square, drawing shapes in the snow with a stick.
“This,” he declared to the gathered children, “is the greatest ga ever played.”
The others crowded closer as he drew a rough rectangle, then smaller squares inside it. “It’s called football. My father made this up! There are twenty-two people in a team. So throw the ball, so run with it, and others crash into them to stop them.”
The children gasped. “Crash?” one girl echoed.
“Not real fighting,” Sirius assured quickly. “Well, sotis real fighting — but with rules.” He tapped the stick against the snow. “You’ve got the quarterback, who throws the ball, and the linebackers, who protect him. Then there’s the offense trying to run, and the defense trying to stop them. You score when you reach this line here — the end zone.”
No one truly understood, but they loved how excited he beca explaining it. His hands moved wildly; his words tumbled over one another. Even the blacksmith’s apprentices leaned from their windows to listen.
Then Sirius clapped his hands. “We can’t play football here — we need too many people — but I’ll teach you another one!”
“This one’s called baseball,” he said proudly.
Within an hour, the snowy street of Wintertown beca the first Narnian playing field north of the Wall.
Sirius split the children into two teams — noble and smallfolk, though he made sure to balance both sides. “No kings, no servants,” he said firmly. “Only players.”
They took turns hitting the ball and running through the snow, laughing, tumbling, and shouting with joy. The ball sotis vanished into snowdrifts, sotis smacked against frozen walls, but no one cared.
Even the guards ended up playing — one of the older n trying to swing the bat, missing terribly, and falling backward into the snow as the children howled with laughter.
From the edge of the square, Lyanna watched quietly. She had co searching for her son, expecting mischief, but what she found made her heart soften.
Her boy stood in the center of Wintertown, his laughter mingling with the laughter of peasants and nobles alike. No crown, no rank, just joy.
Lord Rickard had once told her that kingship was born from fear and loyalty in equal asure. But watching Sirius now, she thought — perhaps true kingship was born from kindness.
By nightfall, when the children were called ho and the fires burned low, the people of Wintertown spoke of the Queen’s son as if he were a blessing sent from the old gods themselves.
“He said thank you,” the baker told her husband in wonder. “A prince, thanking for bread.”
“He played with my girls,” said another. “Didn’t care we are smallfolk.”
“He told stories of dragons and gods and magic,” whispered the blacksmith’s apprentice. “Said his father flies through the sky.”
By morning, everyone in Wintertown knew the na Sirius Gryffindor, the wild-hearted prince who rode a direwolf and laughed like spring after a long winter.
And in the halls of Winterfell, even the lords began to speak of him with a kind of amused awe — a child who could charm peasants and nobility alike, who might one day command the love of two kingdoms.
Snow fell quietly over Winterfell, a thick, soft blanket that dulled every sound — until the cry of pain pierced through the stillness like a bell.
The servants rushed through the corridors, whispering anxiously. “Lady Catelyn is in labor,” one said. “The maester’s been called!”
The great hall, once filled with laughter and talk, turned silent. Even the lords who had been drinking paused to listen as the distant cries echoed faintly from the solar chambers above.
Robb Stark, barely two years old, sat near the hearth clutching a wooden wolf. When another scream rang out from the corridor above, his small face crumpled, and he began to cry. “Mother,” he whimpered, burying his face into Lyanna’s cloak.
Lyanna lifted him gently into her arms. “Hush now, little wolf,” she whispered, rocking him. “Your mother’s strong. Stronger than any of us.”
Hours passed. The corridor outside Catelyn’s chamber grew crowded — Eddard pacing silently, Benjen sitting against the wall with his head in his hands, Lord Rickard standing like a statue, every muscle locked in grim patience.
Maester Luwin’s voice ca faintly through the door. “Steady, my lady… steady now. One more breath…”
And then — the sound they had been waiting for — a baby’s first cry, shrill and small and beautiful.
Eddard exhaled, half laughing, half sobbing. “A girl,” Maester Luwin called through the door. “A healthy baby girl!”
Cheers rippled through the corridor. Benjen thumped his brother’s back. “A girl! The gods are kind tonight!”
But then the midwife burst from the chamber, pale and shaking, her apron sared with blood. “My lords,” she gasped, “the bleeding won’t stop.”
The laughter died.
“What do you an?” Eddard asked, his voice low, dangerous.
“She’s fading,” the woman stamred. “We’ve done all we can — the bandages won’t hold. She’s lost too much blood.”
Before anyone could move, Lyanna was already running. Her furs whipped behind her as she flew down the corridor, her boots pounding the stone. She tore open the door to her chamber, went straight to the chest where she kept her personal stores, and snatched up a small crystal vial filled with a clear, shimring liquid.
It glowed faintly, like moonlight trapped in water.
By the ti she reached Catelyn’s room, two servants tried to bar her way. “My lady, you can’t—”
“Out of my way!” she roared. Her voice, usually calm and lodic, struck like thunder. The guards stepped aside instantly.
Inside, the scene was a nightmare. Catelyn lay pale and still, her breathing shallow, her hair plastered to her forehead with sweat. The sheets beneath her were crimson. Maester Luwin was pressing cloths against the wound, his hands trembling.
“She’s slipping away,” he murmured, his voice broken.
“Not yet,” Lyanna said.
She pulled the stopper from the vial and knelt beside the bed. “Hold her steady,” she commanded. The maester obeyed without question — he had never seen that look in her eyes before, the fire of sothing ancient and unyielding.
Lyanna tilted Catelyn’s head slightly and poured a few drops of the glowing liquid past her lips. Then, with a steady hand, she let several more drops fall upon the wound itself.
The reaction was imdiate. The blood stopped flowing as though ti itself had frozen. The torn skin began to knit, faint threads of silver light weaving across the wound until no trace of it remained.
Catelyn gasped, her body jerking slightly, and color began to return to her cheeks.
Luwin fell back, his eyes wide. “By the gods… what sorcery is this?”
Lyanna’s voice was quiet but firm. “Not sorcery. dicine. Narnian craft.”
Within monts, the impossible had beco truth. Catelyn’s breathing steadied. Her eyes fluttered open.
Eddard was at her side in an instant, taking her hand. “Cat?” he whispered.
She blinked, confused, but smiled faintly when she saw him. “You look as though you’ve seen a ghost.”
He let out a shuddering breath. “I nearly did.”
Luwin was still kneeling, staring at the empty vial in Lyanna’s hand. “I’ve read every text in the Citadel,” he murmured, “and I’ve never seen such a thing. It defies every law of nature.”
“It’s older than your laws,” Lyanna said softly, corking the vial. “Made from a plant caller dittany from Narnia. My husband gave it to for dire need. I never thought I’d have to use it.”
Rickard entered the chamber, his face pale with fear that lted into stunned relief as he saw Catelyn awake. “You saved her,” he said quietly.
Lyanna t his gaze. “No. The gods saved her. I only borrowed their rcy.”
Rickard placed a hand on her shoulder, rough but gentle. “If your Narnia breeds such wonders, then may the gods bless the bond between our worlds.”
Author's Note:
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