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Chapter 5 by ragefire1990 ragefire1990

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Enter Winterfell

Winterfell greeted its lady with cold air and colder stone. The long ride ended beneath the looming gatehouse, where black towers rose sharp against the northern sky. The escort spilled into the yard with tired relief, horses snorting, men grumbling, servants rushing to unload wagons. Ser Rodrik barked orders as though he had never left. The smell of woodsmoke and wet dogs carried on the wind.

You rode in among them, unremarkable. The ward held firm, its hum a second heartbeat beneath your skin. No one questioned why you passed beneath the gate, why you claimed a corner in the guard’s hall, why you carried a chest up to the solar without being told. You have always belonged here is what the ward whispered into their minds, and they accepted it without thought.

The first days in Winterfell settled into rhythm. You rose with the guards, sparred in the yard when asked, carried wood to the kitchens, hauled water when it was needed. You never sought notice, but you never shunned work. A man who labors without complaint earns no questions. By the week’s end, men nodded to you in the yard, the cook pressed bread into your hand, and even the kennel master grunted less when you passed.

Lady Catelyn moved through the keep with grace that masked weariness. She met with stewards, heard reports of grain and fodder, listened to smallfolk with complaints and gifts. She wore her dignity like armor, her words calm, her bearing firm, but you saw the strain behind it. The quiet sigh she stifled when alone in a corridor, the way her hand pressed her brow when she thought no one looked. The mask never slipped in public, but you watched her closely, and you saw.

You were always present. Not close, never pressing, but steady. At the edge of the yard when she crossed it. By the wagons when she passed. At the fire when she sat. She saw you calm a horse that shied at the clang of steel, catch a stumbling boy before his head struck stone, lift a sack heavier than any guard wished to touch. She said nothing, but her eyes lingered longer than before. The bond of trust, seeded on the road, grew quietly in the stone halls.

Not all welcomed you.

Septa Mordane hovered like a shadow at her lady’s side. In the yard, she stood with arms folded, lips thin, gaze sharp whenever you sparred. At meals, she raised her voice when you drew near, scolding the maid for imagined faults, words pointed in your direction though not addressed to you. She wished to wall you off from her lady with tone alone.

But cracks showed. She watched too long when steel rang, when sweat gleamed on your arm. She looked away too fast when your gaze met hers. Her scoldings grew harsher when Catelyn failed to echo her suspicions, as though striking harder could cover the silence.

The first true slip came in the corridor.

You walked it at dusk, torchlight flickering against stone. The halls of Winterfell were quiet at that hour, most gathered in the hall for their meal. You heard her steps before you saw her. Septa Mordane turned the corner sharp, her cloak drawn tight, her face set hard. She saw you and stopped, barring your way though the corridor was wide.

“You place yourself too near the Lady,” she said at once, voice low but firm. “Every step you take, she notices. Every word you speak, she listens. You think I do not see how her eyes linger?”

You tilted your head. “I keep watch. That is all.”

“You are dangerous.” Her words cracked like a lash, though her voice wavered beneath it. “A mercenary’s loyalty is bought and sold. She is a noblewoman, a wife. Do not mistake her courtesy for invitation.”

You took one step closer, not looming, not threatening, but enough that the torchlight showed her flush. “You watch me more closely than she does, Septa. Are you worried for her? Or for yourself?”

Her breath caught. For a heartbeat she faltered, eyes widening before she snapped her gaze away. “Do not twist my words. I serve my lady.”

“Do you?” Your voice was quiet, even. “Or do you serve your doubts, whispered every time your eyes fall where they should not?”

Her mouth opened, but no sound came. She turned sharply, skirts swishing, hurrying down the corridor without another word.

The moment lasted only seconds, but it left its mark. She had come to confront you, to scold and condemn, and she had left rattled. Not righteous. Not sure. Rattled.

After that night, you noticed the change. She still scolded, still clung to her lady’s side, but her words rang hollow. Her voice lacked weight. She lingered longer when you trained in the yard, her frown fixed but her eyes betraying flickers of heat. When you laughed with men at table, she stared until you caught her and turned her gaze away too fast. The more she prayed in silence, the more brittle she became in public.

Catelyn did not see. Or perhaps she mistook the septa’s unease for devotion. She trusted Mordane, leaned on her counsel. Yet Mordane’s words came sharper, more anxious, less steady. She scolded the maid to the point of tears, snapped at guards with trembling authority, pressed her lady too often with warnings.

Catelyn began to chide her gently. “Enough, Mordane,” she said one morning when the septa’s rebuke grew too sharp. “You need not scold every kindness.” Her tone was calm, but the look she gave her companion was weary.

Mordane bowed her head, lips tight, eyes darting. And then her gaze slid, against her will, back to you.

The cracks widened.

You did not press. Not yet. You watched. You waited. The ward made you part of Winterfell, unremarkable, steady. Catelyn’s trust grew, Mordane’s mask weakened, and both leaned nearer with each passing day.

[System Update]

Lady Catelyn — Trust: 80 | Affection: 80

Septa Mordane — Temptation: 70 | Piety: 25

Suspicion (Household): Stable

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