Arya: *Smiling politely as she talks with a few Lords*
Lords: *Decide to make hateful comments about Jon Snow to impress her because what sort of Lady likes bastards rising up and taking power amirite, lol.*
Arya: âŠ
What they see
Reality:
Arya inside her mind: Your deaths shall be slow and painful.
Like seriously. Wolves we see in movies and media⊠Not how wolves behave. At all.
1. A lone wolf is cool, strong and, something to strive to be. FALSE.
Lone wolves have either lost, left or been pushed out of a pack. They are likely starving, lonely and/or looking for a new family or mate. Wolves are highly social and need companionship. They donât want to be alone.
2. An alpha wolf is the biggest, baddest wolf in the pack who fights for their position. FALSE.
There are TWO Alpha wolves in a pack. They are mom and dad, the oldest and usually the smartest cause they have experienced the most. They are usually more timid and less likely to put themselves in danger because they are the only wolves in the pack that breed. If they die, the rest of the family will likely loose their way and eventually break apart.
Biggest wolves are usually the âbetasâ who are children of the alphas (cause most everyone in the pack are puppies from mom and dad) and are generally more likely to investigate.
3. Wolves are brave and will hunt down intruders to there territory. FALSE.
Wolves are HUGE scaredy cats. They are naturally neophobic after about 6months to a year. Something new and different shows up in there territory, they are likely to avoid or keep their distance. They are NOT going to attack unless food or puppies are involved. They are great at communicating and you will know you need to back off long before you are in danger. This also means that no, that âwolf dogâ is not going to be a loyal and protective pet.
4. Wolves adopt. This is true.
Wolves are puppy crazy. Like they love puppies (for the most part) and its very common for packs to adopt puppies into their family. No issues with breeding cause, only mom and dad are allowed to do that. this is a way that puppies breed in captivity have been introduced to the wild, by being left near known nursing females and the pack will often come find them and bring them home. You want to known how much they love puppies? Wolves will give up their own meals to make sure puppies get fed first. Wolves can gorge themselves on up to 20lb of food and have been seen regurgitating for puppies and pregnant mothers.
Please stop demonizing wolves.
Like look at these idiots. I love them so much. Stand up too fast and you scary. That thing that touched the ground, its mine now. They want your shirt and you say no so they growl, tickle their tongue and they are just like WHY!? Trust a growling wolf way more than a dog any day. (All these guys live at a sanctuary for captive born and rescued wolves)
Zutara + being the textbook definition of development. âĄ
Im crying (post is not mine)
Percy, after Gaea, still has nightmares every nights about tartarus, and wakes up in cold sweat every night. He could talk to Annabeth about it, or to Jason, or to- to anyone, really. He would, if it wasnât for this tiny, treacherous voice that somehow is always there in his mind, whispering that no one can help. No one is willing to. No one cares.
Jason told him âI think I get it.â and said no more. Leo - well, Leo isnât there, is he, but he wouldnât be right for that conversation. Frank wouldnât be the right person to talk about it with, either, and nor would any others. And Nico avoids him like the plague since his declaration, and truthfully Percy knows he will have to talk to him about it, but like always that voice tells him it will be useless. No one listens to him, not really.
Annabeth, the only one he could talk to, doesnât want to talk about this. The last time he tried to broach the subject, she said âDonât.â and that was the last of it. She has nightmares too, but when he wakes her up, and lets her cry in his arms, shuddering, trembling, he canât help but wonder if sheâs remembering the monsters - or him.
Sometimes, he wonders if he is one of the monsters in her nightmares.
Of course, once she stops breathing too hard, once she stops being that lost girl that has seen too much, once she stops confusing nightmare and reality - once she stops flinching when she sees his faces cast in shadows⊠Once she stops, and regains some of her bearing, she doesnât talk about it.
âI donât want to talk about it, I donât want to reliveâŠâ she trails off, eyes distant, then she smiles, a thin, forced little smile. âItâll get better.â
And she starts talking about their plans, about graduation, and college in Camp Jupiter. She talks about the future, about her dreams, about architecture, and Percy listens and smiles, and nods. And inside of him, deep down, that treacherous voice wonders how she can talk about the future - how she can even think about it, when heâs still trapped in the past. When his own future seems blurry and dark and poisonous.
No, Annabeth doesnât want to talk about her nightmares, and tartarus. At least with him. They think heâs unobservant. They all have always underestimated him, thought him oblivious - but he knows. He sees the way Hazel, and Piper, look at him sometimes. He has heard the hushed whispers, one evening when he went to see Annabeth and found her with the others. She talks to them.
Sheâs scared of him.
To be fair, he scares himself too, but the realization that no one is willing to help him like he tries to help them so often, leaves a sour taste in his mouth, like poison, like firewater. It makes the glass pieces inside him sharper, and nothing Annabeth can say or do seems to soften them again.
He starts to get headaches. Migraines.
At first, he thinks itâs the lack of sleep. Too many nightmares. Too many things heâd like to say. Too many thoughts in his head. Too much that doesnât go away and that he doesnât know how to control.
So after some time spent with a killer headache and the feeling he will never sleep again, he decides to go where he always felt best - in the water. One night, he simply has had enough, and jumps into the sea, goes underwater, and lets the waves comfort him, soothe him.
Thatâs when he realizes that heâs hyper-aware. He can feel the water around him more astutely than ever. He can feel the ground, too, in a different, more muted manner. He always could, but for some reason, now he is more sensitive. He feels like a sonar that no one thought to disconnect. But the water is soothing, and it overloads him in a good way.
He always feared drowning, but as he falls asleep at the bottom of the ocean, he wonders if it wouldnât be the most peaceful way to go. The best option, really.
The next morning, when he gets out of the water, he hasnât drowned. He also is still hyper-aware, but now he gets why. He can sense every water drop, every fluid everywhere. The moisture in the air, the water in the plants, his own blood thrumming in his veins. In a daze, he wanders into camp - and there he stops dead the first time he crosses path with someone, because he can feel their own blood thrumming in their veins too. And not only that, but every fluid in their body.
Itâs terrible, and wrong and- and yet, he canât help but feel fascinated. So much power, just as the tip of his fingers. He could just extend his will, the way he never dares to, and he could control everything. He could bend the grass. He could bend people⊠The glass shards inside of him rattle, and something twists in his gut. He looks down, horrified with himself for even thinking about it.
It will pass, he thinks as he sits down and takes a soda. It will go away.
But it doesnât. It doesnât - it actually becomes worse. Every water molecule, every fluid, he can sense. He can control. After a week of restraining himself, he waves a hand over a patch of grass, and watches in amazement as the grass follows. Then he doesnât move at all, and still the grass twists like he wants it to. It bends, and twists, and with just a twitch of his finger, grass strands are ripped off the earth, turned to shreds, controlled by the water inside them.
Percy wonders if he could do the same to a monster - rip their limbs off, rip their heads. Make them last. Make them suffer.
The thought is so strong, so surprisingly exhilarating and exciting that it shocks Percy out of it. Whatever it was. He vows to himself to never stray down that path - Annabethâs voice comes to him, telling him that some things arenât meant to be controlled.
Itâs easier said than done. Now that he knows, he has to make the conscious effort to take his soda by hand every morning, instead of just summoning it to him using the fluids. He has to make sure that some of his most violent urges stay that way - urges, that he doesnât act upon. Itâs hard, though. It could be so easy to make Clarisse shut up, simply make those little veins, and the moisture in her skin, go that way, and her mouth would be shut. Hell, with a little pressure there, she would choke on her own saliva.
That night, just like every night that week, Percy goes to sleep in the sea. Being surrounded by water calms his nerves, calms his senses, mutes down everything.Â
For the next week, again, Percy tries his best, but it becomes unbearable. He has to try. And heâs terrified that he will give in to that urge - that he will hurt someone. Heâs terrified that one day he will act by accident, a reflex that will send his friends against the wall like flies against a windshield. Heâs terrified that he will hurt someone, but at the same time there is still this urge, primal and feral, to use his powers to their fullest extent. To slaughter monsters.
Two days later, Sally Jackson opens her door to find her son there. Of course, the first thing she does is telling him off for disappearing, for risking his life again, for not coming to visit sooner - then she notices the bags under his eyes, the twitch in his fingers, the way his sea-green eyes dart around, focusing on things she cannot see. She bites her lip.
âYou look terrible,â she says. âWill you ever stop fighting ?â
Percy wants to laugh at that, but refrains - it would come out bitter, jagged, too sharp and dark, and she might look at him like Annabeth looks at him those days. He will never stop fighting, he knows. There is fire in his blood, destruction in his name, disasters in his inheritance. The sea can never be tamed, can never settle down. He doesnât tell her this, because he doesnât want her disapointed - and maybe, she knows after all. Instead, he smiles, something not quite warm and not quite large enough, and a bit crooked but still. He smiles, and says.
âFor now,â he says. He hesitates, then. âCan I stay here for some time ? I need-â space, time, isolation, love, an anchor, â-some holidays.â
âOh,â Sally looks surprised for a moment, then very pleased. She smiles softly at him. âOf course you can stay, Percy. This is your home too.â
Home. Percy lets her draw him into a hug, and tentatively hugs her back - though his fingers still twitch, and he can feel her heart, and her blood so near. He can sense the humidity of the air, can sense the plants growing on the balcony, two rooms away. Can sense people, in the appartement bellow them, and next to them, and something small - maybe a dog. He senses the canalisations, like veins in a rock body that is this building. His head is still aching. His blood is calling for fights to come.Â
He wonders if itâs fair of him to expose his mother to the monster he is slowly becoming. He wonders if sheâll let him sleep in the bathtub, if sheâll let him lock the door just in case. He wonders if, maybe, with a bit of luck, heâd drown one night, in his bathtub. He wonders if the fact that the idea is oh so tempting makes him selfish.
âYeah,â he finally rasps out, and it sounds distant to him. âHome.â
And he wonders if one day he will truly have one of those.
Arya squirted past Greenbeard so fast he never saw her. âYou are a murderer!â she screamed. âYou killed Mycah, donât say you never did. You murdered him!â
The Hound stared at her with no flicker of recognition. âAnd who was this Mycah, boy?â
âIâm not a boy! But Mycah was. He was a butcherâs boy and you killed him. Jory said you cut him near in half, and he never even had a sword.â She could feel them looking at her now, the women and the children and the men who called themselves the knights of the hollow hill. âWhoâs this now?â someone asked.
The Hound answered. âSeven hells. The little sister. The brat who tossed Joffâs pretty sword in the river.â He gave a bark of laughter. âDonât you know youâre dead?â
âDo you hear?â Hot Pie asked in a hoarse whisper, as he hugged an armful of cabbages. âSomeoneâs coming.âÂ
âGo wake Gendry,â Arya told him. âJust shake him by the shoulder, donât make a lot of noise.â Gendry was easy to wake, unlike Hot Pie, who needed to be kicked and shouted at.Â
âIâll make her my love and weâll rest in the shade, heigh-ho, heigh-ho. The song swelled louder with every word.Â
Hot Pie opened his arms. The cabbages fell to the ground with soft thumps.
âWe have to hide.âÂ
Where? The burned cottage and its overgrown garden stood hard beside the banks of the Trident. There were a few willows growing along the riverâs edge and reed beds in the muddy shallows beyond, but most of the ground hereabouts was painfully open. I knew we should never have left the woods, she thought. Theyâd been so hungry, though, and the garden had been too much a temptation. The bread and cheese they had stolen from Harrenhal had given out six days ago, back in the thick of the woods. âTake Gendry and the horses behind the cottage,â she decided. There was part of one wall still standing, big enough, maybe, to conceal two boys and three horses. If the horses donât whinny, and that singer doesnât come poking around the garden.Â
âWhat about you?â
âIâll hide by the tree. Heâs probably alone. If he bothers me, Iâll kill him. Go!â
They rode north, away from the lake, following a rutted farm road across the torn fields and into the woods and streams. Arya took the lead, kicking her stolen horse to a brisk heedless trot until the trees closed in around her. Hot Pie and Gendry followed as best they could.
She would make much better time on her own, Arya knew, but she could not leave them. They were her pack, her friends, the only living friends that remained to her, and if not for her they would still be safe at Harrenhal, Gendry sweating at his forge and Hot Pie in the kitchens. If the Mummers catch us, Iâll tell them that Iâm Ned Starkâs daughter and sister to the King in the North. Iâll command them to take me to my brother, and to do no harm to Hot Pie and Gendry.
âAnyone?â she repeated. âA man, a woman, a little baby, or Lord Tywin, or the High Septon, or your father?âÂ
âA manâs sire is long dead, but did he live, and did you know his name, he would die at your command.â
âSwear it,â Arya said. âSwear it by the gods.â
âBy all the gods of sea and air, and even him of fire, I swear it.â He placed a hand in the mouth of the weirwood. âBy the seven new gods and the old gods beyond count, I swear it.â
He has sworn. âEven if I named the king.â
âSpeak the name, and death will come. On the morrow, at the turn of the moon, a year from this day, it will come. A man does not fly like a bird, but one foot moves and then another and one day a man is there, and a king dies.â He knelt beside her, so they were face-to-face, âA girl whispers if she fears to speak aloud. Whisper it now. Is it Joffrey?â
Arya put her lips to his ear. âItâs Jaqen Hâghar.â
Even in the burning barn, with walls of flame towering all around and him in chains, he had not seemed so distraught as he did now. âA girl⊠she makes a jest.â
âYou swore. The gods heard you swear.â
âThe gods did hear,â There was a knife in his hand suddenly, its blade thin as her little finger. Whether it was meant for her or him, Arya could not say. âA girl will weep. A girl will lose her only friend.â
âYouâre not my friend. A friend would help me.â She stepped away from him, balanced on the balls of her feet in case he threw his knife. âIâd never kill a friend.â
Jaqenâs smile came and went. âA girl might⊠name another name then, if a friend did help?â âA girl might,â she said. âIf a friend did help.â
The knife vanished. âCome.â
When she got closer, she saw that he was a northman, very tall and thin, huddled in a ragged fur cloak. That was bad. She might have been able to trick a Frey or one of the Brave Companions, but the Dreadfort men had served Roose Bolton their whole life, and they knew him better than she did. If I tell him I am Arya Stark and command him to stand aside⊠No, she dare not. He was a northman, but not a Winterfell man. He belonged to Roose Bolton.
âChild,â said the singer, âput up that sword, and weâll take you to a safe place and get some food in that belly. There are wolves in these parts, and lions, and worse things. No place for a little girl to be wandering alone.â
âSheâs not alone.â Gendry rode out from behind the cottage wall, and behind him Hot Pie, leading her horse. In his chainmail shirt with a sword in his hand, Gendry looked almost a man grown, and dangerous. Hot Pie looked like Hot Pie. âDo like she says, and leave us be,â warned Gendry.
âWhose men were you?â she asked them.
At the sound of her voice, the fat man opened his eyes. The skin around them was so red they looked like boiled eggs floating in a dish of blood. âWater⊠a drinkâŠâ
âWhose?â she said again.
âPay them no mind, boy,â the townsman told her. Â Theyâre none oâ your concern. Â Ride on by.â
âWhat did they do?â she asked him.
âThey put eight people to the sword at Tumblerâs Falls,â he said. âThey wanted the Kingslayer, but he wasnât there so they did some rape and murder.â He jerked a thumb toward the corpse with maggots where his manhood ought to be. âThat one there did the raping. Now move along.â
âA swallow,â the fat one called down. âHaâ mercy, boy, a swallow.â The old one slid an arm up to grasp the bars. The motion made his cage swing violently. âWater,â gasped the one with the flies in his beard.
She looked at their filthy hair and scraggly beards and reddened eyes, at their dry, cracked, bleeding lips. Wolves, she thought again. Like me. Was this her pack? How could they be Robbâs men? She wanted to hit them. She wanted to hurt them. She wanted to cry. They all seemed to be looking at her, the living and the dead alike. The old man had squeezed three fingers out between the bars. âWater,â he said, âwater.â
Arya swung down from her horse. They canât hurt me, theyâre dying. She took her cup from her bedroll and went to the fountain. âWhat do you think youâre doing, boy?â the townsman snapped. âTheyâre no concern oâ yours.â She raised the cup to the fishâs mouth. The water splashed across her fingers and down her sleeve, but Arya did not move until the cup was brimming over. When she turned back toward the cages, the townsman moved to stop her. âYou get away from them, boyââ
âSheâs a girl,â said Harwin. âLeave her be.â
âAye,â said Lem. âLord Beric donât hold with caging men to die of thirst. Why donât you hang them decent?â
âThere was nothing decent âbout them things they did at Tumblerâs Falls,â the townsman growled right back at him.
The bars were too narrow to pass a cup through, but Harwin and Gendry offered her a leg up. She planted a foot in Harwinâs cupped hands, vaulted onto Gendryâs shoulders, and grabbed the bars on top of the cage. The fat man turned his face up and pressed his cheek to the iron, and Arya poured the water over him. He sucked at it eagerly and let it run down over his head and cheeks and hands, and then he licked the dampness off the bars. He would have licked Aryaâs fingers if she hadnât snatched them back. By the time she served the other two the same, a crowd had gathered to watch her.
âThe wolf blood.â Arya remembered now. âIâll be as strong as Robb. I said I would.â She took a deep breath, then lifted the broomstick in both hands and brought it down across her knee. It broke with a loud crack, and she threw the pieces aside. I am a direwolf, and done with wooden teeth.Â
âŠ
At the forge she found the fires extinguished and the doors closed and barred. She crept in a window, as she had once before. Gendry shared a mattress with two other apprentice smiths. She crouched in the loft for a long time before her eyes adjusted enough for her to be sure that he was the one on the end. Then she put a hand over his mouth and pinched him. His eyes opened. He could not have been very deeply asleep. âPlease,â she whispered. She took her hand off his mouth and pointed.Â
For a moment she did not think he understood, but then he slid out from under the blankets. Naked, he padded across the room, shrugged into a loose roughspun tunic, and climbed down from the loft after her. The other sleepers did not stir. âWhat do you want now?â Gendry said in a low angry voice.
âA sword.â
âBlackthumb keeps all the blades locked up, I told you that a hundred times. Is this for Lord Leech?â
âFor me. Break the lock with your hammer.â
âTheyâll break my hand,â he grumbled. âOr worse.â
âNot if you run off with me.â
âRun, and theyâll catch you and kill you.â
âTheyâll do you worse. Lord Bolton is giving Harrenhal to the Bloody Mummers, he told me so.â
Gendry pushed black hair out of his eyes. âSo?â
She looked right at him, fearless. âSo when Vargo Hoatâs the lord, heâs going to cut off the feet of all the servants to keep them from running away. The smiths too.â
Sansa knew all about the sorts of people Arya liked to talk to: squires and grooms and serving girls, old men and naked children, rough-spoken freeriders of uncertain birth. Arya would make friends with anybody. This Mycah was the worst; a butcherâs boy, thirteen and wild, he slept in the meat wagon and smelled of the slaughtering block. Just the sight of him was enough to make Sansa feel sick, but Arya seemed to prefer his company to hers.
Back at Winterfell, they had eaten in the Great Hall almost half the time. Her father used to say that a lord needed to eat with his men, if he hoped to keep them. âKnow the men who follow you,â she heard him tell Robb once, âand let them know you. Donât ask your men to die for a stranger.â At Winterfell, he always had an extra seat set at his own table, and every day a different man would be asked to join him. One night it would be Vayon Poole, and the talk would be coppers and bread stores and servants. The next time it would be Mikken, and her father would listen to him go on about armor and swords and how hot a forge should be and the best way to temper steel. Another day it might be Hullen with his endless horse talk, or Septon Chayle from the library, or Jory, or Ser Rodrik, or even Old Nan with her stories.
Arya was a skilled climber and a fast picker, and she liked to go off by herself. One day she came across a rabbit, purely by happenstance. It was brown and fat, with long ears and a twitchy nose. Rabbits ran faster than cats, but they couldnât climb trees half so well. She whacked it with her stick and grabbed it by its ears, and Yoren stewed it with some mushrooms and wild onions. Arya was given a whole leg, since it was her rabbit. She shared it with Gendry. The rest of them each got a spoonful, even the three in manacles. Jaqen H'ghar thanked her politely for the treat, and Biter licked the grease off his dirty fingers with a blissful look, but Rorge, the noseless one, only laughed and said, âThereâs a hunter now. Lumpyface Lumpyhead Rabbitkiller.â
âThe Trident.â Arya unrolled the stolen map to show them. âSee? Once we reach the Trident, all we need to do is follow it upstream till we come to Riverrun, here.â Her finger traced the path. âItâs a long way, but we canât get lost so long as we keep to the river.â
âGendry,â she called, her voice low and urgent. âThey have a boat. We could sail the rest of the way up to Riverrun. It would be faster than riding, I think.â
Lem was not the leader, though, no more than Tom; that was Greenbeard, the Tyroshi. Arya turned to face him. âTake me to Riverrun and youâll be rewarded,â she said desperately.
A white sun on black was the sigil of Lord Karstark, Arya thought. Those were Robbâs men. She wondered if they were still close. If she could give the outlaws the slip and find them, maybe they would take her to her mother at Riverrun âŠ
It should be noted though:
Warm and dry in a corner between Gendry and Harwin, Arya listened to the singing for a time, then closed her eyes and drifted off to sleep. She dreamt of home; not Riverrun, but Winterfell. It was not a good dream, though.
As she worked, Arya thought about the people she wanted dead. She pretended she could see their faces on the steps, and scrubbed harder to wipe them away. The Starks were at war with the Lannisters and she was a Stark, so she should kill as many Lannisters as she could, that was what you did in wars. But she didnât think she should trust Jaqen. I should kill them myself. Whenever her father had condemned a man to death, he did the deed himself with Ice, his greatsword. âIf you would take a manâs life, you owe it to him to look him in the face and hear his last words,â sheâd heard him tell Robb and Jon once.
She dreamed of wolves most every night. A great pack of wolves, with her at the head. She was bigger than any of them, stronger, swifter, faster. She could outrun horses and outfight lions. When she bared her teeth even men would run from her, her belly was never empty long, and her fur kept her warm even when the wind was blowing cold. And her brothers and sisters were with her, many and more of them, fierce and terrible and hers. They would never leave her.
Hail to you, children of Zeus and rich-haired Leto! And now I will remember you and another song also.
Bran & Arya Stark + Greek Mythology
Arya Stark + overlooked aspects
So me
#me2
Anti-Aryas: Sheâs a psychopath! Murder baby! Misogynist! Masculine! She wouldnât have lasted 5 seconds in her sisterâs place! Sheâs all about nothing but vengeance! She only survived this long through violence. Sheâs too far gone! Â
Me, Ned, and Jon Snow:Â
Sooo cuteđđđ
So you know how Jon was described as moody and sullen even as a small child? well, guess who could âalways make him smileâ?
In this comic, Jon is about eight or so, which would make Arya around three years old
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