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A Wand of Weirwood Chapter 94

Novel: A Wand of Weirwood Author: Beuwulf Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 94 from A Wand of Weirwood, a Action novel by Beuwulf.

Castle Black had always been a place of despair.

Even in sumr, the cold there was a living thing—sothing that seeped through wool and leather, gnawed at joints, and whispered reminders of mortality into the bones of n who stood watch at the edge of the world. For centuries, the Wall lood over them like a frozen god, unyielding and eternal.

But now… sothing was different.

The wind that swept across the yard no longer cut like a knife. It was still cold, yes—but it no longer bit. Breath no longer crystallized instantly in the air. Frost clung less stubbornly to stone and steel. The brothers noticed it first in small ways: gloves that no longer stiffened with ice, water buckets that did not freeze solid overnight, fingers that could be felt even after hours on the Wall.

Castle Black felt… lighter.

And Mole’s Town—poor, half-forgotten Mole’s Town—felt it even more.

For the first ti in living mory, the ground did not remain iron-hard beneath layers of snow. Patches of earth showed through, dark and damp. The people who lived there—miners, farrs, whores, and children born to shadows—stood in the streets with faces tilted skyward, letting the weak northern sun brush their cheeks.

“It’s warm,” one woman whispered, as if afraid to say it too loudly.

Fields that had lain fallow for generations were being asured again. n drove stakes into thawing soil, arguing over boundaries and seed stores. Soone had even brought ploughs out from storage, rusty but usable.

No one understood why this was happening.

But no one complained.

At Castle Black, the brothers gathered in knots, muttering over trenchers of stew that stead longer than usual.

“This isn’t right,” muttered Hobb the cook, eyeing his pots suspiciously. “The cold always cos back.”

“Maybe the gods finally rembered us,” said a younger man, grinning as he flexed fingers that no longer ached.

So laughed.

So didn’t.

For the n of the Night’s Watch, the change brought not just comfort—but fear.

Because the Wall was lting.

Icicles that once stretched like spears from its face had shortened. In so places, thin rivulets of water ran down ancient ice, freezing again only at night. The Wall still stood tall and vast—but it no longer felt eternal.

And if the Wall fell…

What would beco of them?

In the armory, Ser Dylan Mallister stood watching a group of recruits spar clumsily, their breath no longer fogging the air.

“They’re smiling,” he said quietly.

Beside him, Ben Frost frowned. “They shouldn’t be.”

n joined the Watch for many reasons—honor, desperation, escape—but few stayed because they liked it. And yet now, with the cold easing, the burden felt lighter. Too light.

A forr cutpurse from Flea Bottom leaned against a post, laughing with a man who once would have lost his hand for thievery. They wore black now. They had nas again—Brother, Watcher, Defender.

Respect.

Purpose.

And if the Watch ceased to matter… what then?

“I didn’t freeze while doing patrols,” one man muttered to another as they climbed up the Wall. “Never thought I’d say that.”

“You think they’ll disband us?” the other asked.

The first man went quiet.

In the rookery, Maester Aemon sat wrapped in layers of wool, blind eyes lifted toward the sound of dripping water.

Drip.

He had heard it for days now—the slow weeping of the Wall.

“The cold fades,” he murmured. “And with it, the old boundaries.”

Roderic Snow swallowed. “Is that… good, Maester?”

Aemon’s lips curved faintly. “Good and bad are poor words for such things, Rodric. Change does not ask permission.”

“But the Wall was built to protect us,” Rodric pressed. “Wasn’t it?”

“Yes,” Aemon said softly. “And also to imprison.”

Rodric frowned. “Imprison what?”

The old maester did not answer imdiately.

“When the Wall lts,” Aemon said instead, “n will believe magic has died.”

“And has it?”

Aemon smiled sadly. “No, my boy. Magic has rely moved.”

Outside, the brothers of the Night’s Watch went about their duties beneath a sky that felt less hostile than it ever had. Laughter echoed where once there had been only silence and wind.

In Mole’s Town, a child planted seeds in thawed earth, hands trembling with excitent.

None of them knew the truth.

None of them knew that the cold had loosened its grip not because the world was safer—but because sothing far older had been destroyed.

And none of them yet understood that when ancient walls fall, the world does not grow quieter.

It grows louder.

Rodric Snow had spent most of his life believing the Wall was the end of the world.

Not the end in so poetic sense, but a hard, frozen line beyond which nothing changed. Snow fell, n froze, the Watch endured, and ti itself seed to slow until every day felt the sa as the last. That belief had begun to crack weeks ago, when the cold softened and the ice beneath Castle Black wept like a living thing.

Still, Rodric had not expected an army.

He stood on the outskirts of Mole’s Town, boots half-buried in damp earth that should not have been damp at all, lecturing a group of villagers who listened with a mix of hope and suspicion.

“If you plant barley here,” Rodric said, tapping the ground with a stick, “and beans along the slope, the soil won’t tire as quickly. The books say the land rembers what you take from it.”

One of the won snorted. “Books never had to survive a northern winter.”

Rodric smiled faintly. “Neither do winters last forever.”

The words felt bold on his tongue, almost dangerous—but the warmth in the air lent them truth. The bone-deep chill that once ruled Mole’s Town had loosened its grip. Children ran without layers of fur, smoke rose thinner from chimneys, and n spoke of planting instead of rely surviving.

That was when Rodric saw movent on the horizon.

At first, he thought it was a trick of light—heat haze where there should be none. Then the shapes sharpened. Lines. Columns. tal catching sunlight.

Banners.

Rodric’s breath caught.

They were marching in formation—slow, disciplined, unmistakably martial. Wagons rolled alongside them, heavy with supplies. Horses moved in asured pace, not the frantic rush of raiders or the desperate scatter of refugees.

This was no wildling host.

As the banners drew closer, Rodric’s eyes widened.

Direwolves. Manderly tridents. Hornwood sigils. Karstark suns. Umber chains. Tallhart trees. Glover fists.

The North had co.

“What in the Seven…” one of the villagers whispered.

Rodric did not answer. His gaze flicked from banner to banner, cataloguing them with the precision Maester Aemon had drilled into him. There were hundreds—no, thousands. A disciplined host, perhaps five thousand strong, judging by the depth of the columns and the length of the line.

And sothing else stood out.

The flayed man was absent.

No pink banners. No leering sigils. House Bolton was gone, and its absence felt louder than any warhorn.

The North was unified.

Rodric swung himself onto his horse without another word.

The road to Castle Black felt shorter than ever before. The air bit less, the ground gave way under hooves, and his heart hamred with urgency not born of fear, but of consequence. Whatever this army intended, it was not routine. Not patrol. Not trade.

This was history moving on foot.

At the gates of Castle Black, the brothers stiffened at the sight of him riding hard.

“Open!” Rodric shouted. “Open the gates!”

Steel scraped, chains rattled, and he burst into the yard, breath steaming as he dismounted. n gathered quickly—so wary, so curious, all uneasy.

Rodric did not waste ti.

“There is an army marching north,” he said, voice carrying across the yard. “Five thousand, maybe more. Every banner of the North you can na—”

A murmur rippled through the Watch.

Soone asked the question no one wanted to voice.

“Who leads them?”

Rodric swallowed.

“I don’t know,” he admitted. “But when the North moves as one, it’s never without purpose.”

Lord Commander Robert Flynn had known the North was coming long before the banners appeared.

He stood atop the wooden steps near Castle Black’s gate, wrapped in a black cloak that had seen more winters than most n now living. His beard was white, his face carved with lines earned through cold, hunger, and command—but his back was straight, his eyes sharp. Age had taken speed from him, not authority.

“They’ll need shelter,” Flynn said quietly.

The brother beside him blinked. “Shelter, my lord? For who?”

“For the North,” Flynn replied.

He did not raise his voice, did not dramatize it. He never did. Yet the words rippled outward, carried by the wind and by the sudden stillness that followed.

“Open the storehouses,” Flynn continued. “Ration grain, but don’t starve them. Slaughter so oxen. Heat the ale. Every spare canvas we have—get it outside the Wall. They’ll be camping.”

One of the younger brothers hesitated. “How do you—”

Flynn turned his head just enough that the man stopped speaking.

“I know,” the Lord Commander said simply. “That is enough.”

The Wall lood behind them, its vast face streaked with thin black lines where ltwater ran like tears. The brothers had whispered about it for days.

Flynn had listened. He always listened.

And then the horns sounded.

Three long blasts.

n froze. Hands went to spears. Old instincts flared to life.

But Flynn did not move.

“Hold,” he ordered.

Beyond the gate, black dots crested the horizon, growing larger with every heartbeat. Horses. Wagons. n in mail and fur. And above them, banners snapping in the wind.

Direwolves.

When the gate finally opened, the yard of Castle Black filled with silence so thick it pressed against the chest.

Eddard Stark rode at the head of the column.

He wore plain armor, dark and serviceable, his cloak pinned with the sigil of his house. Snow dusted his shoulders. His expression was unreadable, but his eyes were hard—hard in the way n beca when duty outweighed rcy.

Behind him marched the North.

Karstark, Umber, Glover, Tallhart, Hornwood, Manderly—every house that still mattered. Five thousand n, give or take, moving with grim purpose. Not a rabble. Not a boastful host. An executioner’s blade given legs.

Robert Flynn descended the steps and t Eddard Stark at the threshold.

“My lord,” Flynn said, inclining his head—not kneeling, but respectful.

“Lord Commander,” Eddard replied. “Thank you for opening your gates.”

“You were coming whether I opened them or not,” Flynn said dryly.

A flicker of sothing—approval, perhaps—passed through Stark’s eyes.

“You knew,” Eddard said.

Flynn nodded. “The Wall speaks to those who listen.”

Behind them, the yard erupted into controlled chaos. Black Brothers directed wagons outward, helped pitch tents, carried barrels and crates. Fires were lit beyond the Wall’s shadow, their smoke curling into the grey sky.

The Night’s Watch could not house an army.

But it could host one.

As the last banners passed through, whispers spread among the brothers.

“Why are they here?”

“What madness is this?”

“Are they marching with us… or past us?”

Flynn turned, voice carrying despite its calm.

“They are here to do what the Wall no longer can.”

Silence followed.

Later, in the Lord Commander’s chamber, Stark laid the truth bare.

“The Wall is lting,” Eddard said. “You see it. We see it. When it falls enough to be crossed freely, the lands south of it will bleed.”

Flynn folded his hands. “Wildlings haven’t raided in so ti.”

“Because sothing stronger than fear held them back,” Eddard replied. “That sothing is gone.”

Flynn closed his eyes for a brief mont.

“When wolves are quiet,” he said, “it’s because they’re waiting.”

Eddard nodded.

“The North has decided,” he continued. “Unanimously. No half-asures. No waiting for the South to notice or care. Every wildling clan beyond the Wall will be hunted down and destroyed.”

Flynn opened his eyes. “Extermination.”

“Yes.”

The word hung between them like a blade.

Flynn did not recoil.

“My brothers will escort you,” he said at last. “They know the land. The passes. The old dangers.”

“Tomorrow,” Eddard said. “At first light.”

Flynn rose slowly, joints creaking, and extended his hand.

“For the North,” he said.

Eddard clasped it.

“For the North.”

That night, Castle Black did not sleep.

Fires burned bright beyond the Wall. Northern n ate, sharpened steel, spoke in low voices of duty and fear and inevitability. Black Brothers watched them with a mixture of relief and dread.

The Wall had stood for thousands of years.

Now, n would take its place.

Morning ca thin and pale, the kind of dawn that never truly ward the land. Beyond Castle Black, frost clung stubbornly to the ground, crunching beneath boots and hooves as Eddard Stark oversaw the final preparations.

Five thousand n stood ready.

Eddard rode slowly along the lines, his horse’s breath steaming in the cold air. He saw boys barely old enough to shave, n scarred from earlier wars, and greybeards who had marched because the North had called. Spears were checked, axes tightened, shields strapped and re-strapped. Every man knew why he was here.

This was not conquest.

The Wall was lting. That truth sat heavy in every chest. When the Wall fell, the world would change—and the North would bleed first.

Rodric Snow stood near the gate, watching with a scholar’s eyes rather than a soldier’s. He had read about wars in books, had copied accounts of ancient purges and failed defenses, but seeing an army assemble with this quiet certainty made ink and parchnt feel foolish.

“They look like n walking into a grave,” he murmured.

“They look like n making sure others don’t,” Robert Flynn replied beside him.

The gates opened again, and the North marched northward—into land that had never loved them, into snowfields that swallowed sound, into a future none of them could clearly see.

Far away, beyond ice and distance and secrecy, another army was also moving.

From Telmar, banners snapped in a sharper wind, their cloth bearing sigils no southern lord had ever sworn to. The army of Narnia marched westward across the frozen expanse, disciplined but different—n and won alike in its ranks, giants pacing with careful steps among them, skinchangers moving silently at the edges.

Ragnar rode at the front, his massive fra wrapped in layered furs, his eyes scanning the horizon. Beside him walked Jarl, calm and deliberate, his hand resting near the hilt of his blade.

Their purpose was not slaughter.

It was rescue.

From Telmar’s walls, Brandon Stark watched them go.

His jaw was clenched so tightly it ached.

“You should have let ride with them,” he said, his voice sharp with barely contained fury.

Harry Gryffindor stood beside him, cloak drawn close, eyes fixed on the distant column of moving figures. He did not look at Brandon when he answered.

“No.”

Brandon rounded on him. “You think I don’t know how to fight?”

Harry turned then, his green eyes steady, unyielding.

“You want them to bend the knee,” Harry stated.

Silence fell between them, heavy and unresolved.

“There is sothing else,” Brandon said at last. “You said you had a plan. One that involves .”

Harry nodded. “I do.”

“Then why keep here?”

Harry’s expression softened, just a fraction. Harry placed a hand on his shoulder. “Not yet,” he said. “But soon.”

Brandon turned back toward the marching army, watching until the last banner disappeared into the white horizon.

Unknown to them all, two forces moved toward the sa land from opposite directions.

One marching to exterminate.

One marching to save.

Neither knowing the other was coming.

Author's Note:

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