"Wilson had been killed by everybody. It was this that made his death special, the children had been told.
It was justice, it was all the people
showing how much they hated this crime.
Killing was justice when everybody joined in."
Barry Unsworth, Sacred Hunger
Davos the Smuggler
Storm's End
Second Month of 283 After Conquest
When Davos had been asked to stay after delivering what turned out to be his final load of smuggled fish, stale bread and onions the flea bottom smuggling legend was a might perplexed. When he had been told the reason why Davos was shocked. When he thought back over what Davos had witnessed and been part of that day the weary seaman's mind could not accept it, but the truth spoke for itself.
Then
He had arrived in the Sweet Mercy the night after the mutiny attempt and the near murder of his hopefully future patron. From what Davos heard a few more seconds and an inch of blade to the left and his gambit to improve the lives of his family would have gone up in smoke. Davos had been a smuggler for many years, a good one if he might say so himself. But there comes a time in every mans life when he realizes that luck and skill have hard limits, especially when one wrong turn or betrayal led to a long drop and a short stop.
From what the onion smuggler knew the Rebellion was still anyone's to win, even though the failure of the Targaryens to isolate and destroy Robert Baratheon at the Battle of the Bells made a great many question the prospects of continued Dragon rule. And to be honest the increasingly erratic and frankly evil behavior of King Aerys and his son made Davos hope that prospect ended sooner rather than later. He personally cared little for the games of the highborn, but he had children and Davos wanted a sane and orderly world for them go grow up in.
It was largely why he chose to 'join' the rebellion's side. Well that and the fact said siege allowed him to gain a very favorable position. Lord Stannis chose his brother over his king and a man willing to stay loyal to family despite grave danger to himself was one he could respect. The fact Stannis and Robert would likely be generous to people who risked their lives to keep their little brother alive didn't hurt either. The small boy looked lean when he had come to Davos claiming to be his brother's page. The solemn air he had about him, despite the cracking voice and the fact he refused to rush at the food being unloaded before his wide eyes impressed the old salt as well.
"Kindly come this way Captain Davos. My Lord Stannis wishes to speak to you before he passes judgment on the mutineers," Renly told him. He resisted the urge to rub the lordling's head as Davos would if Renly were one his own children. Such a small child should not have to be dealing with such weighty issues.
However, the more rational part of Davos knew better. He'd seen younger children forced to fight dogs in the street for scraps of moldy bread and known gangs of vicious youth the same age. Horrible situations and pain were readily found in the worlds of both lords and beggars. Romantic notions of a better world were best left to dreams.
He found the Lord of Storm's End alone before a pile of parchments. He could make out sketches of various implements, though for the life of him Davos couldn't figure out what they were supposed to be. The largest drawing looked like some kind of chamber pot. There was also a hollow wooden tube with flanges and what looked like joinings. The things that lordlings found time to entertain themselves with never failed to confound the Flea Bottom native.
His attention must have slipped because Davos didn't notice when Stannis addressed him.
"Oh never mind those things. They are important, but we have far weightier things to address good Captain" the tall, gaunt yet powerful lord said.
Davos, realizing his mistake took a knee and a more reverent attitude. "Forgive me mi'lord Baratheon. I was only curious as to things that was none of me business," he wisely replied. Surprisingly the blockade shriven man strode up to him, reached down and pulled the aging smuggler up gently by the shoulders. Although he was relatively narrow compared to his beast of a brother and more than half starved due to fairly sharing the rationing Stannis Baratheon was deceptively strong.
"Please Ser Davos. You are the reason any of us are alive or still in this fight. When we are alone there is no need for you to bow. Address me as Lord Stannis or simply lord and we can speak easily and get to the point much more quickly." Davos was taken aback. Rumors the smuggler trusted said Lord Stannis had always been brusque and direct, but he had never been friendly.
"Ser?" came from Davos' lips without thinking. The word caught him and the lord a bit by surprise judging my the reaction written on the Lord's face. Davos had survived on more than one occasion solely because of his ability to read men. The powerful one in front of him was shocked by his words, or by something. The smuggler couldn't be sure.
"Ahh, perhaps I spoke a bit too prematurely. Normally one asks the recipient if they desired to enter the service of a noble…" Davos did something he rarely ever did and cut off a highborn. He was not going to allow him to change his mind due to misinterpreting Davos' surprise for lack of interest.
"Yes m'lord I will gladly serve you to the best of my abilities in any way I can." He took a knee and bowed his head. When he heard a clearing of the throat he looked up to see Stannis looking down on him. There was a hardness on his face and for a minute Davos thought he had fucked up royally. Then Stannis smiled. It wasn't a full grin, for that would probably have scared the life from Davos. For all Davos spoke to before coming to Storms End swore to the gods Stannis Baratheon never displayed mirth. Hell, they said the man never laughed or shared a jest since his parents' death so many years ago.
No, it was just a half smile, but it reached his eyes. Davo's heart rate went back to normal. Though unconsciously his eyes turned toward the door and he counted how many steps it would take to reach it and then his ship. Then Stannis did laugh.
"Ha, ha. Relax my good fellow. Take a seat and have some tea if you wish. I'm not going to punish you for showing enthusiasm to serve me, and coincidentally provide a better life for Mayra and your little ones." Davos nearly fainted. How did he know about his family? Then he remembered the rumors. Before him was the man who knew how many men each lord had in all seven kingdoms.
Sitting in the chair left vacant for him. The common thistle tea to his right held lemon and Stannis himself had partaken of it. As it would be bad form to deny the hospitality of a noble he took a sip himself.
"Don't worry I still intend to knight you though let me give you some advice. First it's considered poor form to cut off your lord in the midst of a speech even though we high born tend to be a might long winded." Stannis snickered, as to did Davos. With the ice broken the lord took another sip before he continued.
"Second, never agree to anything before you hear the fine details. As an experienced and famous smuggler you should already know this Davos. If you agree to serve me I will never ask you to do anything heinous or reprehensible. I think we have had enough of that with the current arse on the Iron Throne and I suspect his son may take after him." He then fixed Davos an iron gaze.
"Should you think I am heading in that direction I expect you to say something before it gets to the point someone needs to shove a sword in my back or drive a hammer through my ribs. Do you think you can do that?"
Davos was confused by Stannis's language but what he said made sense. It made more sense than most any lord he heard before. He found his head nodding.
"Aye, if you want sound and honest council from me its yours. Only begging my lord's pardon if you'd promise not to take me head or other parts for giving it when you don't want to hear it." Stannis laughed again and this time he had a full smile when he was done. Davos nearly spat out his tea. There were rumors that he took a blow to the head during the mutiny. Such blows were known to change men in odd ways.
"Good, good. I so promise. Though that is contingent on your advice being well reasoned and not self serving tripe like just about all of the nonsense I hear every day. When my Brother triumphs I will be a prince and as such I have no intention of repeating Rheagar's mistakes. I may have to tolerate the presence of flatterers and fools, but I want none of them in my own private council chamber." He was quiet then.
"I'm not the best spoken man, nor am book learned but I can think bettern a lot of common folk." And a few lord's sons turned customs agents is what he held back.
"And quite a few lord's sons play acting customs officials eh?" This time Davos did spit. The cloud of tea traveled a good foot and half, but well short of Lord Stannis. It was almost as if he planned this. Though still, spitting in front of your prospective lord was something that wasn't done.
"My lord.." Davos said quickly seeking the right words to rectify this etiquette error. Only Stannis stopped him by raised a hand for silence.
"You underestimated me. Its ok, a lot of us high born do it all the time to 'small folk' because we feel superior to them. Well not all of us have our heads up our asses Davos." The lord did some funny motion with his hands as he said small folk that for some reason Davos found humorous. Well blows to the head were like that, and aside from that quirk Stannis seemed perfectly sane.
"Of course that won't do. Underestimating others is unacceptable because doing so leaves you vulnerable to critical errors. If you are advising me or carrying out my orders with such a mindset it could cost lives. Yours or my own. So you will do your best to treat everyone man, woman or child, rich or poor as a holder of sufficient intellect to be a threat. Is that clear?" Lord Stannis' face lost all joviality then.
"Yes m'lord," came from his lips. It was the only thing Davos could say and further it was right. Lord Stannis was right. That was the way he survived all those years at sea in foreign ports among cut throats and sly magisters.
"Secondly, your lack of education is appalling. Don't misunderstand. I don't blame you or anyone else for not being able to read or write. I find it disgusting that basic education is kept from anyone. If more people could read and write our kingdom would be more productive." It was a thought Davos found interesting.
"I can't snap my fingers and make everyone able to understand the words of Maester Bael, but I can tell you one thing. Once this war is over every person who is under my service will be able to read and write to a acceptable level." He pointed at Davos and the lord's eyes flashed with intensity.
"That means you. Will. Learn. How. To. Read. And Write. You will also learn how to fight properly, ride a horse, court etiquette and a bunch of other tom fool things that have nothing to do with practical business and will bore the shit out of you. But those are the breaks of leaving a life of drudgery, bad drinking water and piracy!" At the last words out his prospective lord's mouth Davos found his lip involuntarily twisting into a frown.
"What's that soon to be Ser Davos? Did I say something that was wrong or foolish?" Davos looked at his face and instantly knew he was being tested. The lord was good at reading people, very good and he had set this meeting up. Davos took a breath and answered honestly, as anything else was likely to not end well.
"Begging your lordship's pardon, but I weren't never a pirate." The prospective prince of Westeros raised his right eyebrow as though he were expecting a more elaborate answer.
"Kindly explain the difference then my friend. You evaded the king's factors and brought in goods that were illegal. Stealing from the king is theft and stealing on the high seas is piracy no?" Davos' eyes narrowed as he studied the man who would be his new lord. Stannis was known to value the law and justice and for him to ask these questions meant he wanted to know Davos' understanding of the concepts.
"For starters m'lord I never hurt anyone in my sailings. Yes I fought some people on the seas, real pirates who wanted to take my crew as slaves or rob me of my cargo. Those types are real pirates. But I never did any man violence who didn't offer it to me."
"And before you ask that includes the king's factors. I always surrendered when they asked to board my ships. It's not my fault they never found anything worth arresting me for is it?" The damn Lord smiled again and nodded. Davos suspected Stannis already knew the answer before the lord asked the question it seemed.
"So do you feel paying the kings tax isn't something you are obliged to do? You do admit to not doing that right?"
"Aye, I did keep the kings coin, to feed my family and the crew of my ships. I'll admit that there were times I could have afforded it, but there were times sixty coppers was the difference between starving and half starving." Still smiling Stannis replied in a deeper tone.
"So desperation and honest need is an excuse for breaking the law, as long as you don't hurt other people? I mean you didn't smuggle slaves or weapons to wildlings unlike the captain you served under near East Watch after all. I'm also pretty sure that more than a few lords, the same ones sending their children to catch you, were involved in your operations. No victim, no harm, no real need for punishment. That about sum it up?"
Davos sensed a trap. The penalty for theft under Aegon's law was maiming. However this man didn't look like he wanted to or was going to hurt him, and Davos had already damned himself with a confession. For starters he still needed Davos to keep feeding him and he already knew of his guilt. Though the hairs in the back of his neck were offering warnings. 'Thread lightly but honestly here' was the general gist.
"I'll say that leniency for those pushed to crime by hard circumstance would be in order m'lord. Tis not justice to lop off the hand of a starving man who steals a loaf of bread to feed his family because there is no honest work. Show me a man who would watch his children die of hunger and I'll show you a craven dog."
Stannis didn't laugh again but he nodded his head in appreciation of Davos' response.
"Fair enough. I'll waive the usual response that leniency only emboldens people with hard luck stories to rob shoppes. It usually ends with everyone stealing all the time and no move vendors opening their shoppes leading to the economy collapsing and everyone starving. It makes for a droll argument."
"It's also bloody stupid", Davos found himself saying without leave.
"That too. It also leaves people who don't have skills and without a limb forced to turn to either begging or more theft. We both know how that story ends. But let's look at it from a different angle," came from the now intrigued lord.
"Would you say that rape, actual violent piracy and slaving are clearly evil and there is little to no excuse for committing those crimes?" Davos nodded to such a clear cut application of basic law.
"Aye m'lord. A robber might steal from desperation to care for his ailing mother, but what makes his victims any less poor or deserving to feed their kin with their hard earned wages?"
"And would you say that supporting slavers, robbers and rapers was a serious crime Davos? Is it right to punish people who made it easier for violent criminals to commit crimes or escape society's laws?" There it was again, another obvious trap. This time Davos could see where it was going.
"Yes m'lord the fence who converts stolen goods, the men who break in girls for pimps, even the patrolmen who take a bribe not follow up on leads. All of them have a part in making more victims. O course the people who buy the stolen silverware, or visit the brothels or appoint their friends to the watch just to collect a wage without showin up are close to the root o the problem." Stannis clapped then added his own take on Davos' point.
"Well reasoned Davos. And you threw the charge back at my social class without directly insulting me. There is no rapist pimp without a so called joy seeker. And we both know that means some lord's son. The fancy goods are bought by people with money and that means the upper class. They are also the ones who put crooked watch members in place, after all small folk don't collect the graft in Kings Landing. Hell, many peasants don't actually use money." Aside from the lord's use of some strange words Davos could understand his train of though easily. 'Peasant' clearly meant poor person though Davos had no clue as to it social meaning. Leave it to the high born to make twenty words for the same thing.
"Of course you are forgetting that the kings tax is what pays for the ships that keep slavers off our shores. It pays for the upkeep of the roads so that merchants feel safe enough to bring food to the poor in out of the way villages. If every rolling merchant had to pay for guards the price of food would rise and so would suffering." Davos looked at the lord with a slightly cocked head. Up until that moment his arguments were rock solid, but this one was less sure footed.
"Begging my lord's pardon but perhaps he should spend more time outside his castle and among the people in the villages. There is little of the King's protection outside the walls of a holdfast. Most people have what protection them and their neighbors can make for themselves." Davos found himself getting heated. Stannis was a fair man with a sound mind, but for such practical military man he was starting to sound like he lost touch with reality.
Stannis raised his hands in a placating gesture. "Peace my friend. I'm not bloody stupid. I know more often than we'd like to believe the gold cloaks cause more problems than they solve. I'm also aware of how difficult it is to protect the coasts fully. It wouldn't surprise me to know that some Steptstones trash rightly bragged about raiding villages off Cape Wrath."
"However, imagine what would happen if there were no patrols and those pirates could do what they wanted without any fear of reprisal? The perception of order brings order. And when people break down the faith in the law, whether by breaking it directly, corrupting it with graft or by destroying its credibility it makes life worse for everyone. And we both know it isn't the rich who suffer when that happens, or at least not until the 'sudden peasant revolt' happens." Stannis made the air quotes again and Davos realized it was meant as a mocking gesture. Davos found that he smirked and laughed outright for the first time of the night. Working for Lord Stannis wouldn't be half bad if this was how he was going to act.
"Ah, I'm glad you could relax. But don't be so happy just yet. I still have to punish you for your decade or so of smuggling. However, I'm willing to let you choose the method. First, I want you to add up all the smuggling crimes you've committed since your watched your captain get hung for trading weapons to the wildlings. If you can't remember each year's totals just add up your rough yearly take."
"Then I want you to calculate how much tax you actually welched on. Don't worry about it you can borrow one of my pages and all the parchment you need. Though be considerate as I don't have fresh supply of it yet. Then I want you to bring to me a fair and just sentence I can deliver to you alongside your knighthood."
"Now should you not choose to do this I will understand. In that case I will provide you with a very fat purse once my Brother takes the throne. I'll also wait three months before posting an even larger bounty on your head. Of course that bounty will only be enforced if you are still in Westeros or you decide to live in an area that supports slavery. So going to Bravos or the Summer Islands and retiring would be an option." Davos swallowed.
"That seems fair m'lord. But beggin your pardon do you have to accept my suggestion?" Stannis smiled at the ex smuggler, it was predatory.
"No, but the more practical and sensible you are the more likely I am to accept your proposal. Also be warned I'm not going to kill you or leave you incapable of serving me, as I'm not going to waste my time training you to be a burden to me." Davos found himself releasing a breath he didn't know he was holding.
"You have until Eddard Stark comes to relieve this siege to make up your mind. I would hurry if I were you, your crimes might take while to tally up. Oh and ser Onion and Turnips I'd learn to say my lord instead of m'lord. It's more knightly." Davos realized he was being dismissed when Renly showed up at the door to take him to his quarters.
"Thank you my lord Stannis. I will try to prove myself up to the challenge." He bowed to lord Stannis's nod and pretended he didn't see Stannis wink at his brother from the corner of his eye.
Now
Davos stood outside in the courtyard alongside the knights and pages, while the seven accused were led out before the assembly. It was slightly overcast but visibility was excellent.
They were bound with heavy ropes, nautical knots bound both arms and legs. There were more than a few bruises on each of the soon to be condemned but they were each clean. If Davos had to guess it was done with sea water as no one would waste fresh water on dead men.
Inwardly he winced. If Davos had to choose between washing his wounds with salt and appearing with a bad odor he knew what option he would take. The smuggler was no closer to solving Lord Stannis' riddle but he knew one thing. He was not leaving Storms End without his knightship. Marya and his sons would not suffer to spare Davos a bit of skin.
Since the soon to be prince promised he wouldn't leave him useless it meant Davos would at least keep his sword arm intact.
He began thinking of all the body parts he could afford to give up that met the prince's requirements for 'being of use'. Since Davos didn't have to decide until the castle was relieved it meant the king was being reasonable. That was a vast difference from the kind of blind loyalty demanded by most high borns and Davos found himself respecting the man even more.
From his elevated chair Stannis addressed the assembled lords, soldiers and sundry laborers. Anyone currently in Storms End was someone the Baratheons implicitly trusted and had immediate use for. All the others had been turned out, so the recent betrayal was something all present were less than pleased about. Even if there was a growing desire for surrender being associated with cowardly betrayal was something universally loathed.
Stannis' voice cut through the idle chatter and insults hurled at the accused as they walked forward to meet their fate. No one really expected this to end in a surprising manner. They didn't' just try to run, they ambushed and struck their lord and worse the ring leader did so from behind. A serious example had to be made of these idiots. The betting pool among his crew favored crucifixion. Davos heard rumors among the scullery maids that they would use the catapults. Davos himself, having met the man figured hanging or the sword. Stannis wasn't a cruel man and he couldn't imagine him drawing their deaths out longer than necessary.
"I will have SILENCE and DECORUM! This is court of LAW!" Stannis' battle field voice was impressive to say the least. They didn't need the big metal gong and large smooth mace at all.
"We all know why we are here. You Ser Doman Crayborn, You Ser Carson Mondy, You Ser Gered Lycomb, You Squire Donald Cumberly, You Man at Arms Selwidge Sharpe and You Watchman Yoren Albridge stand accused of mutiny and attempted murder of your liege lord."
"For the sake of justice I must ask you to enter your pleas!" For a moment none of them moved but one by one they actually had the audacity to plead not guilty, or offer excuses. Maester Cresson entered their please on a scroll. All of them spoke except for Ser Doman.
Ser Doman rode forward and when Lord Stannis raised his hand the spear carrier allowed him to approach the dais.
"Thank you, but I am not going to beg for my life." The look Stannis displayed and his nod let Davos know Ser Doman wasn't surprising him.
"You speak of mutiny, you talk about my tying to kill my rightful lord. But isn't that what you are doing right now? Those men outside the gates are loyal to the true king of the seven kingdoms." He paused and stared into Lord Stannis' eyes. The gaunt lord returned the glare with interest before he replied.
"So it is ok for the rightful king to not only rape his wife and encourage his heir to despoil the daughters of his loyal lord paramounts, but to cruelly murder said lords when they dare complain?" Stannis 'voice carried over the courtyard. His tone rightfully implying the defendant was a simpleton in addition to being a cowardly oath breaker.
"I should also say making a mockery of trial by combat is beyond royal prerogative. Unless you are suggesting roasting the honorable lord Stark alive by wildfire while his son strangled himself to save him was in fact justice." Not to be undone and with no recourse save audacity Ser Doman rallied.
"Those allegations are unproven!" That was the wrong track to take with the crowd and they began to murmur various death threats. Lord Stanis rose his hand and there was silence again.
"I think the madness of Aerys is common knowledge. And if Lyanna had voluntarily left with Rheagar I doubt her brother would have risked his own life to get her back after she would clearly have shamed the Stark name. A simple letter stating that fact could not have been hidden, even if Rhaegar was lying. Yet even that much respect for Westerosi law was beyond the scope of his prophesy addled brain. But be that as it may the crimes of the Targaryeans or Baratheons are not the topic of today."
"Rather it is your rather feeble attempt to murder me and betray this castle to our enemies that is the focus of this trial."
Cries of here here and Aye could be heard. A turn of Stannis' head was all it took to calm them. Stannis waited until Ser Doman could gather his wits and allowed him more rope to hang himself. It seemed that the rogue knight realized his death was certain but wanted to go out of this world with some honor, for his next arguments were less self serving.
"Fine. If that is the way this will go. You are a fair man, or at least that is how you want to be seen. But tell me what is fair about subjecting all of us to slow starvation because of your stubborn pride?" He turned to face the crowd and some energy or passion took him. Ser Doman's voice was loud and strong and full of conviction.
"We have been held up in this castle for almost a year, while our supposed better king is was hiding in every whore house in the Riverlands. What Stannis doesn't want to tell you is even he isn't confident that his brother is still alive. Their rebellion isn't nearly as powerful as they are pretending," came forth from Doman's indignation. With a fiery spirit he continued.
"We and this castle are his guarantee of surety. They will let us all starve to death so that they can make a deal that spares their noble Baratheon skins before they go bowing down to their dragon cousins once again. Thousands of us little people will die so they can keep doing the same things they always have. Making tragic songs about death and honor, while they reap the benefits we suffer the blade and fire." Ser Doman looked at each of the men guarding him and slowly climbed a bit higher while reaching his full height.
"Tis why Ser Gared Wylde and his men slipped out three months ago quietly. They were with the Baratheons as long as anyone else and they knew what was going on. If even the master of arms felt it was better to give up why shouldn't the rest of us. I don't apologize for trying to save my life, for trying to save all of us. I'm just sorry I failed." His face turned into stone and he stepped down with the others to await judgment. There were murmurs in the crowd and a few gave him sympathetic looks.
If Stannis was in any way discomforted by this turn of events it didn't show. He merely allowed the crowd to murmur another few seconds before again raising his hands for silence.
"Let me first say that Ser Damon is both a coward and a liar. Yes, my brother may have been visiting a whore house, but if there is one thing he loves it's a fight. All of you here know he would never abandon a fight or warriors in the field. He is winning this war. Robert claimed victory at the Battle of the Bells and he will crush Rheagar at the Trident. If he hasn't done so already, provided the caitiff Rheagar found the stones to fight him that is. Then our grand alliance will root out the madness in Kings Landing and put an end to the shadow of fear over the Seven Kingdoms once and for all." There was a series of shouts and the crowd was once again his. But Lord Stannis was not finished.
"Make no mistake Mace Tyrell knows he is on the wrong side of this fight. He knows it morally and he knows it practically. He had enough of fighting my brother so he is camped out here with an army that he could have taken to pincer our brave brethren months ago. I don't blame him, I wouldn't want to loose any more men against Robert either," Stannis said finishing with a bold laugh. There were laughs and a few shouts of ours is the fury.
"Second. I have shared every hardship with you and so has my family. Renly come. Show them our faith in our brother and his cause." Stannis had his paige unhook his plate and chain. Stannis himself took of his armor. The crowd below could see how the still powerful man had lost almost 2 stone. The boy bravely stood before the crowd and took off his shirt revealing his rib and ever distending belly. The looks in the crowd if they were angry before were now almost murderous.
"Third, we are not fighting here to seat my brother on the throne. We aren't even fighting here to get rid of the current branch of Targaryens. We are fighting here because there needs to be accountability in those who are responsible for law and order. A man can't just kidnap another man's betrothed, and this is nothing but a kidnapping. Even if you want to believe that Rhaegar asked Lyanna to come with him, why wait until she was almost at the alter to act? Do you really believe the Prince whose father enjoyed raping his wife for years would take no for an answer?" Hell noes and no Rapist King rejoined Stannis' question.
"Lastly those men outside our gates have been there for the better part of a year. Most of you are career soldiers, many of you fought with my father against Maelys. Do you honestly believe they are just going to end this siege without a sack of some kind? Even if they did what do you think Aerys would order? Care to wager your life or your wife's honor on lord fat flower to defy the mad king?" Again more hell noes accompanied the lord's questions.
With that Davos knew Stannis had them for good.
"Now do any of the rest of you actually believe I don't recognize your faces? Better yet, do any of you actually dispute fighting with my loyal guards?" Each of them shook their heads.
"Then I hereby sentence you all to death!" The defendants were lead to a wall opposite the courtyard where their ropes were tied to heavy stones. At the sound of drums men at arms brought out covered baskets and placed them at regular intervals in front of the crowd. When they were all stationed there was signal and the canvas was lifted.
Davos of course knew that they were filled with stones. At once there was a wailing from three of the condemned.
"I am not a cruel man..." Lord Stannis began. However, Ser Doman cut him off.
"Like hell you aren't! If you're going to kill us do it decent like. Hemp Rope or Block!" he cried in vain.
Cries of 'shut up you bastard' drowned him out. However, there were other murmurings in the crowd. Some of them crying for a more merciful end, though the majority went the other way. Some of those methods proscribed included drawing and quartering and crucifixion. Davos swore never to commit any crimes in Storm's End.
The gong rang once, twice and the people were silent.
"In most circumstances I would simply use a noose or my sword. But what you did wasn't just a crime against me." He turned to face the crowd "If they had succeeded they would have placed every man, woman and child in the hands of the mad king's puppets."
"I won't force any man or woman to pass judgment on these crimes. I leave that to your own conscience but my sentence stands or falls on one point. Are we standing as one against what waits outside this wall or are we not?"
Davos didn't see it but a washerwoman murmured something close to fucking traitor and brushed past him. A second later a stone careened off the head of a still cursing Ser Doman.
That broke the dam. Men and women of every walk of life picked up stones and began pelting the condemned for what seemed like hours, but was probably only two minutes. Davos was surprised to find he had tossed a fist size stone at one of the shorter men. With all the blood it was hard to tell who was who. He noted that most of the fighting men were the most enthusiastic. In the excitement Davos still noted that Master Cressen, Renly and Stannis had not participated.
Then the gong rang again. Everyone stopped.
"As mine is the voice that ordered the sentence, mine is the sword that will grant mercy!"
With that the lanky lord walked to each prisoner and pierced their heart with his long sword.
He nodded at Davos once before walking back to his keep, Renly and Cressen trailing behind him. As they walked by the people of Storms End began to chant the obvious rejoinder.
OURS IS THE FURY! Ours is the FURY! Ours is the FURY! It was said later than Mace Tyrell wet himself in surprise.
Needless to say there were no more attempts let alone talk of surrender or mutiny and little Renly received no more 'hungry' looks.
Three months later Lord Eddard Stark rode to their relief with the news the war all was but over.