Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 73 — Anomaly from Game of Thrones: Reborn as Drogon, a Action novel by Adivin5.

Once a man joined the Night's Watch, it ant severing ties with the past.

Jon Snow had accepted that. He could no longer avenge his father, Eddard Stark.

Yet Janos Slynt—of all people—had a close relationship with Ser Alliser Thorne, and now held authority as one of the Watch's leading decision-makers.

The thought of those two passing judgnt on him for infiltrating the wildlings made Jon's head throb worse than his wounds.

---

Grinding his teeth against the pain, Jon forced himself into his clothes and made his way to the hall.

Maester Aemon, Ser Alliser, and Janos were already seated at the long table, waiting.

The mont Jon stepped inside, Ser Alliser lifted his chin, the familiar mockery already written into his voice.

"Lord Jon Snow," Thorne drawled, using that pointed, sarcastic title he always reserved for Jon. "Do you admit that you killed Qhorin Halfhand… and defected to the wildlings, swearing fealty to Mance Rayder as your king?"

Jon held his gaze.

"I did kill Qhorin," he said evenly. "But it was at his request—when he was already grievously wounded. The only way to make Mance trust was to prove, without doubt, that I had truly turned."

Janos leaned forward, sneering.

"And who can prove that Qhorin ordered you to kill him?"

Jon hesitated, just for a heartbeat.

"…No one," he admitted. "It was only the two of us."

"All the better," Alliser said, as though he'd just been handed a gift. He flicked his eyes toward Maester Aemon, who listened in silence. "Then tell us this—if you were so devoted to the wildlings, why didn't you stay with Mance? Why did you creep back over the Wall in secret and return to Castle Black?"

Jon's jaw tightened.

"Whether you believe or not," he said, voice firm, "Mance Rayder has united nearly every wildling clan beyond the Wall. They're preparing to attack this place."

He watched their expressions—Alliser's impatience, Janos's arrogance, Aemon's sharp stillness.

"The wildlings' second-in-command, Tormund, and the Thenns are already south of the Wall. They're likely eting even now. They plan to strike from both sides—inside and out—coordinated with Mance's main force."

His tone sharpened, urgency bleeding through.

"Mance's host numbers more than a hundred thousand."

Jon leaned forward slightly, as if trying to force the truth into their skulls.

"With the n we have, we cannot withstand a full assault. If the wildlings breach the Wall, they'll sweep across the land like locusts—burning, looting, stripping everything in their path."

"And the armies of the North won't be able to stop them from migrating south."

Jon's report hit the three n behind the long table like a blow.

All of them were visibly shaken.

Even Ser Alliser—who had never hidden his prejudice against Jon—couldn't deny the weight of the bastard of Winterfell's words. Thorne had spent years disdaining Jon, but he also knew one thing better than most:

This boy had been shaped by Eddard Stark.

From the mont Jon joined the Night's Watch, he had carried that stubborn sense of justice like a blade in his chest—so sharp it made him look down on the ragged, corrupt mix that made up the Watch.

But Thorne's long-standing hostility kept him from letting Jon off easily. He pressed again.

"And how can you be certain Mance trusted you completely?" Thorne demanded. "Trusted you—a forr brother of the Night's Watch—enough to let you hear sothing this crucial?"

Jon clenched his jaw so hard it ached.

"Because I killed Qhorin Halfhand," he said through his teeth. "Because I told them the Watch knew Castor's secret… and did nothing about it."

He swallowed, his voice tightening.

"And because I… I slept with a wildling woman."

As he spoke, the image flashed again in his mind—Craster handing a newborn into the cold, inhuman hands beyond the Wall.

At Jon's admission, Maester Aemon—who had been sitting with his head slightly lifted as though listening—suddenly turned his blind face toward Ser Alliser.

Janos Slynt also snapped his gaze to Thorne at once, clearly trying to confirm whether Jon's claim was true.

Thorne's expression instantly turned ugly. His eyes dropped, and he shifted topics stiffly, as if eager to shove the discomfort away.

"So you admit you broke the Watch's oath of celibacy?"

"If that counts as breaking the oath," Maester Aemon said calmly, facing forward again, "then the Night's Watch stopped producing n long ago."

Thorne, guilt flickering in his posture, said nothing.

Janos, on the other hand, cared far less about vows than survival. The fear in his eyes was unmistakable.

"Are the White Walkers truly impossible to kill?" he asked quickly. "How many are there?"

Jon glanced at the man who had once betrayed his father. He hesitated… then answered anyway.

"They can be killed with dragonglass daggers—or Valyrian steel weapons." He took a slow breath. "As for their numbers… a thousand, ten thousand, maybe tens of thousands."

He watched Janos's face pale.

"They raise the dead," Jon continued grimly. "Every corpse becos their soldier. Their numbers keep growing. No one knows how many they have now."

Ever since arriving at Castle Black, Janos had heard rumors about the White Walkers. At first he'd dismissed it as Night's Watch propaganda—so bedti terror story used to scare unruly children.

But gradually he'd realized the truth.

The Others were real.

He had co north expecting to throw his weight around—an ex-Commander of the City Watch, after all. Instead, he was greeted by the reality of wildling armies pressing in… and sothing far worse waiting beyond them.

Escape had already begun creeping into his thoughts.

But Janos also knew the laws: any lord in the Seven Kingdoms had the authority to seize a deserter from the Watch. Running now, before chaos truly erupted, would be suicide.

Thorne's eyes narrowed. Then he turned toward the old maester.

"Maester Aemon," he asked, tight-lipped, "what do you believe should be done with Jon Snow?"

Aemon's voice wavered slightly with age, but carried the weight of unquestionable authority.

"This does not appear to be the ti to punish Jon Snow," he said slowly. "It is ti to consider how we will hold against the wildlings… and how we will face the White Walkers."

"The defense of the realm," he finished, "is the duty of the Night's Watch."

No one argued with the hundred-year-old Targaryen whose reputation alone could silence blades.

Jon was released and allowed to move freely.

Aemon summoned Samwell Tarly at once, ordering him to feed the ravens and prepare ink and parchnt. He intended to send yet another desperate ssage to the great houses of Westeros—

begging for support.

Eight days later, the towering pyramids of ereen finally rose into view.

The guards and the drivers were ecstatic—yet oddly reluctant, too. Ten days of safe escort, of good food and unbelievable sights, was coming to an end. The journey had beco sothing they would rember for the rest of their lives.

Shireen leaned out of the carriage, her eyes widening until they looked ready to burst.

She hadn't imagined a "re city" in Slaver's Bay could possess sothing so grand.

Ahead, on a vast hill, ereen lood like a monunt to arrogance—its pyramid peaks stabbing at the sky.

Tyrion and Shae also stepped out, quietly taking in the city that was about to beco their new ho.

But just as they neared the gate, the carriage suddenly stopped.

One of the guards rode back quickly and reported to Tyrion:

"The city gates are closed. We can't enter."

Tyrion's brow creased at once.

Closed gates in broad daylight?

That wasn't normal.

Even Drogon—who had been lazily passing the ti beside Shireen as she read—seed startled. ereen had never closed its gates during the day before.

Before Tyrion could even climb down, Drogon had already lifted the curtain and flown out.

He circled once and saw it clearly: the gates were sealed tight, and outside them gathered a crowd of ereenese residents and rchants waiting to enter.

Whatever was happening inside, Drogon had no intention of waiting out here like a beggar.

He flew straight to the wall above the gatehouse and hissed sharply at the Unsullied stationed there.

The soldiers had already noticed the black dragon erging from one of the outside carriages. When the officer saw Drogon hovering above the gatehouse rather than entering himself, he imdiately understood.

He barked an order.

The gates opened.

The waiting crowd did not rush in.

They had seen the dragon—and the two carriages associated with him. More importantly, it had been Drogon who demanded the gate be opened.

No one dared push ahead of him.

Drogon led the two carriages through first.

Only then did the townsfolk and rchants trickle forward carefully into ereen, and the guards shut the gates again behind them.

You are reading Game of Thrones: Reborn as Drogon Chapter 73 — Anomaly on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.