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A Wand of Weirwood Chapter 92

Novel: A Wand of Weirwood Author: Beuwulf Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 92 from A Wand of Weirwood, a Action novel by Beuwulf.

The ravens reached the South.

They landed on sun-ward stone and marble balustrades, on towers that slled of citrus and salt. Their black wings beat against a sky that was blue and indifferent, carrying words that spoke of lting ice, ancient wards failing, and danger stirring beyond the Wall.

The South listened.

And then it dismissed them.

In King’s Landing, the Small Council received the ssage with polite impatience.

“The Wall lting?” one lord scoffed, fanning himself lazily. “Ice lts every sumr. That is hardly news.”

Another waved a jeweled hand. “Wildlings raid every few years. The Watch exists precisely to deal with such matters. Why should the Crown be troubled?”

Soone else laughed outright. “If the North can’t handle half-naked barbarians, perhaps they should learn how to live sowhere warr.”

There were murmurs of agreent.

To the South, the North was a place of cold stone and colder people. A land of old gods and older grudges. They spoke of it as though it were barely part of the realm at all—an inconvenient borderland that paid its taxes late and offered little else of value.

Savages, so called them.

Their gods were savage.

Their customs savage.

Their endless talk of ancient threats—savage superstition.

The South wanted timber, gold, and silence from the North. Nothing more.

So the raven’s ssage was filed away, discussed briefly, and forgotten.

The Wall, they decided, had stood for thousands of years. It would stand a little longer. And if it did not—well, that was a Northern problem.

Far to the north, Winterfell burned with torches.

The contrast could not have been greater.

Snow fell thick and heavy as riders arrived from every direction, banners snapping in the wind—wolves, bears, flayed n, rn, towers, and runes of ancient houses whose nas were older than many southern kingdoms combined.

Every lord of the North had been summoned.

And none dared ignore the call.

Inside the Great Hall of Winterfell, the air was tense enough to cut with a blade. The fires roared, but they could not fully banish the chill that crept in from stone walls soaked in centuries of winter.

Lord Rickard Stark sat at the high table, his face carved from granite, hands folded before him. Beside him stood Eddard Stark, silent and grim, eyes scanning the gathered lords.

Benjen Stark was there too—newly wed, still wearing black mourning colors beneath his cloak, because in the North, joy and sorrow often walked hand in hand.

The hall was packed.

Voices rose in sharp bursts.

“The Wall has never lted like this before,” Lord Mormont growled, slamming a fist onto the table. “Never.”

“Our forefathers fought in the Long Night,” another lord said. “We were raised on those stories. This is not a small deal. This is really bad.”

“The Watch is undermanned,” ca another voice. “They cannot hold if the Wall fails.”

“And what of the wildlings?” soone demanded. “If the Wall falls, they will co south—whether we wish to or not.”

At that, several lords nodded grimly.

To the North, war beyond the Wall was not a myth.

It was mory.

Eight thousand years of songs, warnings, and blood. The Long Night was not a bedti story here—it was an inheritance, passed down with the sa seriousness as land and na.

Rickard Stark finally rose.

The hall fell silent instantly.

“The South may scoff,” Rickard said, his voice steady but heavy with restrained anger. “Let them. They have always believed winter stops at the Neck.”

A few bitter chuckles followed.

“But this,” Rickard continued, “is our burden. It always has been.”

He turned slowly, eting the eyes of every lord present.

“The Wall is weakening. Whether the Others are gone or not, the land beyond it is changing. And if we do nothing—if we wait for King’s Landing to care—then we will bleed alone.”

Eddard stepped forward. “We cannot afford hesitation,” he said. “Not now.”

“What do you propose?” Lord Glover asked.

Rickard’s jaw tightened. “We prepare. We reinforce the Watch where we can. We secure our borders. We stock grain, weapons, and fire.”

“And if the wildlings co?” another lord asked.

Rickard did not answer imdiately.

Because they all knew the truth.

War with the free folk had never been clean. It was not conquest—it was survival. And now, with whispers of ice and ancient enemies returning, nothing was certain.

From the back of the hall, an older lord spoke quietly. “The North has allies now.”

The room stilled.

Eyes turned.

“You speak of her,” soone said.

No one needed a na.

Lyanna Griffindor.

Queen of Narnia.

The wolf who had crossed the Sea and returned crowned.

Rickard Stark closed his eyes briefly, then opened them again.

“Yes,” he said. “We do.”

A murmur spread—uneasy, hopeful, fearful all at once.

“And if the South will not aid us,” Rickard finished, voice hardening, “then the North will stand with those who will.”

The aning was clear.

The South might turn away.

But the North would not stand alone anymore.

The news ca to Harry Gryffindor through a skinchanger.

The man had been placed in Oldtown last year. He lived as a dockhand by day, a drunk by night, and a pair of watching eyes always. When he slipped into the mind of a gull or a rat, he heard things that were never ant to be overheard.

“The Wall is lting,” the skinchanger said, voice tight. “Cracking. lting fast.”

Harry went very still.

The mirror’s glow reflected pale light across his face, carving shadows beneath his eyes. For a long mont, he said nothing.

“How fast?” Harry asked.

“Faster each day. The Watch is panicking. The South laughed. But Oldtown—Oldtown is awake.”

That made Harry’s jaw tighten.

Oldtown did not wake easily.

In the Citadel, the maesters gathered like crows around a corpse. The Wall had always been an irritation to them. A contradiction carved into the world. Ice that did not lt. Ice fused with spells. A structure that refused reason.

For centuries, they had called it a relic of ignorance.

Now it was dissolving.

“They think it ans magic is dying,” the skinchanger continued. “They’re celebrating it. Calling it the last ember going out.”

Harry closed his eyes.

Of course they would.

The Citadel had never hated magic out of fear. They hated it because it could not be owned, asured, or replicated. They had spent generations trying to explain the world into obedience, and magic refused to kneel.

If the Wall fell because magic was fading, then in their minds, they had won.

“They’re sending a delegation,” the skinchanger said. “Fifteen maesters. Officially to study the lt. Unofficially… to prove they were right.”

Harry let out a slow breath.

That was dangerous.

Not because the maesters would find truth—but because they would misunderstand it.

“Have they grasped the consequences?” Harry asked quietly.

A bitter laugh ca through the mirror. “They don’t care. To them, the Wall was always a mistake. A superstition. They think once it’s gone, the North will finally be ‘civilized.’”

Harry’s fingers curled against the stone table beside him.

The maesters saw the Wall as an obstacle.

Harry saw it as a border.

The Wall had never truly been about keeping people out. It was a line of containnt—of balance. Beyond it lay peoples and powers that followed different laws. Different rhythms. Narnia had grown precisely because it existed outside the southern gaze.

If the Wall vanished…

Then the world would not grow safer.

It would grow crowded.

“There are still free folk beyond Narnia’s reach,” Harry said. “Clans who never joined. Tribes that hate any rule at all.”

“Yes,” the skinchanger agreed. “And they’ll raid south once crossing becos easy. Which will make the North scream. Which will make the South march. Which will make them march through Narnian lands.”

Harry opened his eyes.

“And then they’ll bla us.”

“Exactly.”

Silence stretched between them.

Harry turned away from the mirror and walked to the window. Beyond the glass, Telmar slept—lanterns glowing softly, streets clean, warm despite the snow that should have ruled this latitude. His people slept believing the worst was over.

It wasn’t.

The Wall had been a shield for Westeros.

But it had also been a warning.

Once gone, everyone would move.

Kings would see opportunity.

Maesters would see proof.

Lords would see land.

And every conflict beyond the Wall would eventually bleed into Narnia’s borders.

Harry rested his palm against the cold glass.

“If the Wall lts entirely,” he said, “the Westros will demand authority over the North. Over the Watch. Over the lands beyond.”

“And when we refuses?” the skinchanger asked.

Harry’s reflection stared back at him, green eyes sharp and tired.

“Then they’ll start calling us a threat.”

He turned back to the mirror.

“Stay where you are,” Harry said. “Watch the maesters. Listen to what they assu. That will tell more than what they discover.”

“Yes, my king.”

The mirror dimd.

Harry stood alone again.

The irony burned bitter in his chest.

The Wall lting was being celebrated as the death of magic.

But Harry knew the truth.

Magic was not dying.

It was changing hands.

The Wall had been sustained by an ancient equilibrium—one Harry had disturbed when he destroyed the White Walkers. Their magic had been bound into the Wall’s spells as much as it had been imprisoned by them. With their annihilation, the Wall had lost its anchor.

The maesters would never understand that.

Harry turned back toward the hearth, where embers glowed quietly.

If the Wall disappeared, Narnia would no longer be hidden behind neglect and distance.

It would stand exposed.

And soon, the world would decide whether it wanted to trade with Narnia…

Or test it.

Harry straightened.

“If they want to study the end of magic,” he murmured to the empty room, “then they should be careful not to summon it.”

Outside, the wind shifted—carrying with it the distant scent of salt, snow, and change.

The summons ca without warning.

Only ssengers—moving faster than rchants, quieter than soldiers—rode out from Telmar, Frostshield, Hardho, and the coast, carrying the sa words to every corner of Narnia:

The King calls the Council. Five days. Gno City.

That alone was enough to stir unease.

The war against the White Walkers had ended scarcely few days earlier. The pyres were still warm in places. Wounds had not yet fully closed. Songs of victory had barely settled into mory. And yet, Harry Gryffindor was calling the realm together again.

People talked.

So said another threat had been seen beyond the frost.

So whispered that the South had finally stirred.

Gno City was an intentional choice.

It was not Telmar with its towering walls and polished halls. Not Frostshield with its martial weight and grim authority. Gno City was older in spirit—rougher, humbler, born of survival rather than grandeur. It was the first place Narnia had truly taken root, the settlent built when there had been nothing but snow and stubborn hope.

And it sat at the crossroads.

From the coast, from the mountains, from the deep frostlands, from the islands—every road bent toward it.

Even Ragnar of Skagos answered the call.

When his ships were spotted on the horizon, battered hulls cutting through ice-choked waters, more than a few people knew then that this eting was not ceremonial.

This was destiny being argued over a table.

The eting hall of Potter Castle had once been a granary.

Harry had insisted it remain that way in spirit, even after it was rebuilt into an stronghold. The hall was wide rather than tall, sturdy rather than ornate. Thick beams crossed the ceiling. Maps and carved reliefs replaced banners. The floor bore scuff marks from boots, not polish from vanity.

When the fifth day ca, the hall filled early.

Governors from every settlent.

Counciln elected by trade guilds and labor circles.

Ship captains hardened by frozen seas.

The leader of the skinchangers, beasts watching silently from the shadows.

Representatives of the giants—seated carefully, benches reinforced for their weight.

Ragnar himself, scarred, massive, radiating quiet nace.

And at the center—

Harry Gryffindor.

He wore plain black armor, the sa he had worn into battle, cleaned but still bearing faint marks of war. Lyanna stood beside him, Helga resting near her feet, eyes half-closed but alert.

When Harry rose, the hall stilled.

No one spoke.

“You all know why I called you,” Harry said.

His voice was not loud, but it carried.

“The White Walkers are gone,” he continued. “Destroyed. Their armies broken. Their magic shattered.”

A ripple moved through the room—satisfaction, pride, relief.

“But,” Harry said, lifting a hand, “sothing else is happening.”

He turned and gestured to a carved map mounted behind him.

“The Wall is lting.”

That drew real reactions.

Murmurs. Sharp breaths. A few outright laughs.

“The Wall?” a ship captain scoffed. “That cursed thing has stood since before the First n. Ice lts every sumr.”

Harry looked at him calmly. “Not like this.”

Silence fell again.

“The Wall was sustained by ancient magic,” Harry said. “Magic bound to what lived—and was imprisoned—beyond it. With the destruction of the White Walkers, that magic is unraveling.”

“The Wall was more than protection,” Harry went on. “It was a boundary. A reason for distance. For neglect. For the Westros to look away from the land beyond the wall.”

Ragnar grunted. “And now?”

“And now,” Harry said, “that excuse is lting.”

The implications spread through the room like cold.

“The South will move,” one governor said slowly. “First soldiers. Then settlers.”

“They already look at us as savages,” another added. “Wildlings playing at kings.”

A skinchanger spoke, voice low. “They will co to test us.”

“Yes,” Harry said simply. “They will.”

For a mont, the room buzzed with barely restrained energy.

Then soone laughed.

A warrior—scarred, broad-shouldered—rose to his feet. “Then let them,” he said. “We have giants. We have a dragon. Twenty thousand who would die for this land.”

Several voices agreed imdiately.

“We could take the North in a month.”

“Westeros would fall like dry timber.”

“They look down on us—why not show them why they shouldn’t?”

The idea ignited quickly.

Conquest.

Retaliation.

Prevention through dominance.

Harry let it build.

Then he spoke again.

“No.”

The single word cut through the room like steel.

Heads turned.

“I did not build Narnia to beco another empire,” Harry said. “We did not bleed against the dead so we could beco conquerors.”

Ragnar frowned. “Strength unused is strength wasted.”

Harry t his gaze. “Strength misused is tyranny.”

That gave even Ragnar pause.

“We conquer because we must,” Harry continued. “Not because we can.”

He walked slowly along the table, eyes eting each leader in turn.

“The South does not know us,” he said. “And fear cos from ignorance. If we march now, we confirm every lie they believe.”

“So we hide?” soone demanded. “Behind magic forever?”

Harry stopped.

“No,” he said. “We don’t hide.”

That surprised them.

“We prepare,” he said. “We unify what remains divided. There are still clans beyond our rule—free folk who refuse the law, who raid and kill.”

Several heads nodded grimly.

“They cannot remain independent when the Wall is gone,” Harry said. “If we leave them outside, the South will use them as justification to invade us.”

“So we bring them in,” Lyanna said quietly.

Harry inclined his head. “By choice or by force—but they will not remain a threat.”

“And after?” asked the leader of the rchants.

Harry returned to the head of the table.

“After,” he said, “we stop pretending Narnia doesn’t exist.”

The room stilled.

“We will show the world where we stand,” Harry said. “On our terms. With borders. With law. With strength that does not need to roar to be heard.”

Silence stretched.

Then Ragnar smiled—a slow, dangerous grin.

“The Kneelers won’t like that.”

Harry smiled back, thin and knowing. “They don’t have to.”

The eting lasted hours.

Strategies were drawn. Tilines debated. Resources allocated.

But when they finally rose from their seats, one thing was clear to all of them:

Narnia would not strike first.

But it would never again pretend to be invisible.

And for the first ti, the world would be forced to see what had grown in the cold.

Author's Note:

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