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Now reading: Chapter 97 from Artos 'The Demon Wolf', a Action novel by cregantheblackwolf.

"So that was it," Maester Luwin said at last, drawing the tale to a close. "The story of DemonWolf. I fear I have already said more than I intended. That should be enough for you all."

For a mont, no one spoke.

They all took the story differently.

Robb sat back slowly, his mind clearly on the weight of war more than the glory of it. He had heard of battles before, of victories and songs and banners raised high, but this was not how songs spoke. There was no beauty in what Luwin had described. Only n driven to the edge of death, and so pushed beyond it.

Jon's face had gone quiet in the way it often did when he thought hard. He understood better than most how cruel the world could be, how often honor and truth were only things n spoke of when they were safe enough not to bleed for them.

Arya looked almost hungry for more, though not for the slaughter itself. She heard the wildness in the story, the movent, the danger, the kind of life that did not sit still behind stone walls.

Bjorn's chest had swollen with a quiet pride. Whatever else had been said, his father had fought like a wolf among wolves, and that was enough for him. The stories Uncle Stig had told, the things his grandfather had hinted at, all of it had beco truth now.

Sansa had gone pale at the edges. The numbers, the blood, the parting of n from life so easily — that was what stayed with her. Glory had never much interested her. The cost of it did.

Margaery and Loras understood the tale perhaps more sharply than the others. Their house had stood on the losing side of that war in many ways, and Lord Artos had been one of the n who had played a role in making thier family a losing side .To hear his na spoken like that was to hear one more piece of how the south had been changed forever.

Bran and Arty, for all the seriousness in the room, had mostly caught the parts they found exciting. The battle, the nicknas, the kingsguard, the wolf with one eye. Those were the sorts of things boys rembered first.

Aldric was different.

He had listened with a kind of quiet strain, as if each new word had forced him to look again at his father and see a shape he had not known before. He had known Artos as stern, protective, often tired, and always there. But this — this fierce, broken, rciless thing from the stories — was a man he had never quite imagined standing behind the one who tucked Sera into bed and the man who carried no blade at his hip now.

Jon was the first to speak again.

"What of Braavos?" he asked the maester. "You have spoken of the wars here, but not of his years in Braavos. What of his journey there?"

Luwin let out a slow breath through his nose.

"Because little is known of it," he said. "Not fully. Lord Artos has always been silent on that part of his life. I know only that he fought as a rcenary captain in Essos and beca famous enough there that his na was known in the markets and camps. That much is certain. But the rest…" He shook his head. "The rest is hidden in silence."

Aldric frowned. "Father never spoke of it. Mother did, sotis, but not often. He always seed to avoid the subject."

Luwin nodded once. "Aye. There are things n do not wish to revisit. So because they are ashad. So because they are wounded. So because the mory itself is still alive enough to hurt."

The chamber had grown quiet again.

Then the maester's tone shifted, growing more solemn.

"When Lord Artos returned to the North, it was to take part in the war against the Greyjoys. He was a warrior still then, relentless and hard and never afraid of battle. But the reports I have read, and the n I have spoken to, suggest he was not rely fighting the ironborn."

He looked at them all in turn.

"It is said he was fighting himself."

That caught even Robb's attention.

Luwin continued, his voice lower now.

"When i saw him back in Winterfell, I saw He still had ghosts from Essos following him back across the sea. Whatever he had seen there, whatever he had done, it was not easily left behind. When he returned north, he was not simply a man coming ho. He was a man trying to outrun sothing that had already marked him."

The children were still.

Even Arya did not interrupt.

"It was a hard ti for all of them," Luwin said. "For Lord Eddard. For Lord MoorStark. For Lord Artos. Each man had his own burdens, but none could lift his brother from the dark he had brought back with him."

He paused, then turned his eyes toward Aldric.

"But soone did."

Aldric looked up at once.

"Your mother," Luwin said gently. "Lady Seraphine was with child then. She carried you. And in ti, she and you beca the anchor Lord Artos had needed more than he knew."

Aldric's face changed at that. It was not the sort of thing a boy forgot easily. He had heard of his father's strength, of his discipline, of the years he had turned Sea Dragon Point into sothing like a sword forged for the North. But this was different. This was vulnerability. This was the knowledge that even the strongest man in his world had once nearly been dragged under, and that it had been his mother who held him fast.

Sansa lowered her eyes. Arya was silent.

Bran looked as though he was trying to understand everything at once.

Robb spoke first, quietly. "So it was not only war that saved him."

"No," said Luwin. "Sotis war rely gives a man sothing to hide inside. It does not heal him. Only ti and the people he loves can do that, if he lets them."

He drew himself up a little, as if the lesson were over.

"Now, I think that is enough for one day. Your curiosity has been satisfied, I hope?"

One by one they nodded.

Then, slowly, the children began to file out, talking in low voices, each carrying away a different piece of the tale.

Days passed.

Winterfell returned to its ordinary rhythm, if such a thing could ever truly be said of a castle in the North.

Snow drifted across the yard. Horses stamped in the cold. n ca and went. Fires burned low in the halls. And beneath all of it, the castle held its secrets as it always had.

That night, Artos did not sleep well.

The first dream ca in pieces.

Sands. Heat. The stamp of hooves. Harsh voices in a language that cut at the ear. Dark eyes and braided hair. The sll of blood under the sun. The shape of riders on the horizon, moving fast, too fast.

The Dothraki war

He woke once with his jaw clenched hard enough to ache.

Artos sweating from the dreams. But he persists.

But sleep took him again.

This ti the dream changed.

The desert was gone.

In its place stood a red field beneath a low and terrible sky. Mist curled over broken ground. The air slled of rain and iron.

Before him stood a great bird, black as ash, its feathers wet with sothing dark. It watched him with eyes too sharp to be any raven's.

Then the bird laughed.

Not with a bird's cry, but with a man's voice.

The shape shifted.

Wings folded into a cloak. Beak into a face. The thing before him beca a man — pale, hard-faced, and strange, with one red eye and one that seed older than death itself.

The man smiled at him like soone who had already seen the end of the road.

"How many more will you endure, Stark?"

Bloodraven asked, his voice light with mockery. "How long do you an to last?"

Artos tried to answer, but the dream would not let him speak.

Bloodraven only smiled wider.

"You Starks are stubborn," he said. "Always so terribly stubborn. It is almost admirable. Almost."

Artos reached for a blade that was not there.

The other man laughed.

The sound was thin and cruel and seed to co from everywhere at once.

Artos lashed out.

The man stepped aside as if he had known the blow before it was thrown.

Then he was laughing again, and the red sky seed to fold in on itself above them.

"How much more, Stark?" the man asked. "How much more before you break?"

Artos woke with a start, breath rough in his throat, his head pounding hard enough to make the room swim for a mont.

The dream lingered in fragnts. The birds. The red sky. The laughing face.

He pressed a hand to his temple and shut his eyes.

Whatever it was, it left behind only the dull ache of unease and the feeling that sothing seen in sleep had not been ant only for sleep.

And in the dark, with winter pressing hard against the walls of Winterfell, Artos Stark lay still and listened to the silence.

For a mont, even demons seed to have ghosts.

---

Drop so power stones and comnts boys

Again sweet request please join Patreon. Your greedy author needs money .

Ah yes please check another book Jon 'The wild Wolf' it's a decent story and is of my friend .

Thank you for your lovely support

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