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02:56This is mockery
03:00There's a war coming
03:02We could be a force, you and I
03:06You'll consider it?
03:10Good!
03:11Caravan departs after the roast
03:21May the gods, may the gods keep him, may the gods keep him.
03:42So my prince, my prince, my prince, my prince, your father, he was...
04:12He was a great man.
04:13He died in my armor.
04:19Plenty of sons have died in their father's armor.
04:25How many fathers have died in their sons?
04:33I could not see.
04:42He was still young.
04:46He had in him to be a great king.
04:49The greatest since Aegon the Dragon.
04:57Why would the gods take him and leave you?
05:05I've wondered the same.
05:13Be gone with you, Sir Duncan.
05:28Sir Duncan!
05:30Dunk!
05:34We went by your camp, but you weren't there.
05:37Started getting worried.
05:40You've come from Bailord's funeral.
05:44I can't believe you went.
05:46Thought I owed it to him.
05:54Everybody...
05:54Everybody blames me for his death.
05:57Don't they?
06:01I don't.
06:20Okay.
06:30Stefan took my tank.
06:31Said I betrayed the family by abandoning him.
06:34Can you believe that?
06:37Left him a little else.
06:39Sorry, Rams.
06:40Ah, don't be.
06:41He's just mad that he lost.
06:43First trial of 1,700 years
06:45and Lord Stefan Fosseyway got beat by his little cousin.
06:50Besides,
06:51it's better to be an unripe green apple
06:52than a wormy red one.
07:00I think I brought one of my cousin's ribs.
07:04Morning.
07:11Er, good morning.
07:13Sir Duncan,
07:14this is Rowan.
07:20Who's the green apple fossil is?
07:24Huh?
07:25My wife.
07:27Pleased to meet you,
07:28Sir Duncan.
07:30Oh.
07:31Right.
07:31Er,
07:32pleased to meet you,
07:33too,
07:34Lady Rowan.
07:34She'll come and watch the trial.
07:36Said I fought like a wild bull.
07:37Oh.
07:39And with all the grace of one.
07:49I had no squire to see to my wounds.
07:52And she offered to help me out my armour and...
08:00Anyway,
08:00she said I've got a with child now,
08:02so I figured we ought to get married.
08:07Feels like a boy.
08:09You heard that, Sir Duncan?
08:10Oh, boy.
08:15That's, um...
08:18Sir Duncan,
08:20Prince Maycar demands a word
08:22you to come with us.
08:24He's not going anywhere.
08:25He's been through enough.
08:27It's fine.
08:34I'll be fine.
08:37Congratulations.
09:08I'm sending Arion to the east.
09:13A few years in the free cities.
09:16They change him for the better.
09:26Some men will say I meant to kill my brother.
09:31The gods know it is a lie,
09:33but I will hear the whispers to the day I die.
09:38You swung the mace,
09:40my lord.
09:43But it was for me
09:44Prince Baylor died.
09:47You will hear them whisper as well.
09:50The king is old.
09:53The king is old.
09:53When he dies,
09:55each time a battle is lost or a crop fails,
09:58the fools will say Baelor would not have let it happen.
10:04But the hedge knight killed him.
10:09If I had not fought,
10:13he would have had my hand on the foot.
10:18I sat
10:20under the tree this morning
10:22and I asked,
10:24could I have spared one?
10:31I mean,
10:32how can a foot be worth a prince's life?
10:36And what answer does your tree give you?
10:47Every day
10:48at Evenfall
10:51Sir Ireland would say
10:52I wonder what the morrow will bring.
10:57Mightn't it be that some morrow will come
10:59when I'll have need that foot,
11:01when the realm will need that foot
11:03even more than a prince's life.
11:08Not bloody likely.
11:10The realm has as many hedge knights as hedges.
11:22My youngest son seems to have grown fond of you, sir.
11:27It is time he was a squire.
11:30But he tells me
11:31he will serve no knight but you.
11:36He is an unruling boy
11:37as you would have noticed.
11:39He is a good lad.
11:40Just needs a stern hand.
11:42That's all.
11:46Will you have him?
11:50Me?
11:52There is a place for you at Summerhall.
11:56You'll swear your sword to me
11:57and Aegon can squire for you
11:59while you train him.
12:01My master at arms
12:03will finish your own training.
12:07your Sir Ireland did all he could for you,
12:09I have no doubt.
12:12But you still have much to learn.
12:23I beg your pardon, Lord.
12:25I do.
12:27I do.
12:29But I think I'm done with princes.
12:35Yep.
12:56Are you spying?
13:02No.
13:13You went out of pain?
13:24You went out of pain?
13:28I'm sorry.
13:36Maybe you're not the knight I thought you were.
14:00Have you heard this story before?
14:04Many times.
14:06From where?
14:10From you.
14:12Oh.
14:21May I ask you, sir?
14:22When a lord calls his banners and sends us boys off to war,
14:27it's custom for each to nail a penny to the oak in the square,
14:33and if we return, to take it down.
14:38Oh, it's a great old tree.
14:41And yet, it's often hard to find a spare bit to nail a new penny.
14:53Why did you never knight me?
14:58Did you think I'd leave you?
15:02I wouldn't have.
15:08Or was it something else?
15:15Sir?
15:21Sir?
15:29Sir?
15:45Sir?
15:46Sir?
15:54Sir?
15:55And that's why they call it the penny tree.
16:01A true knight always finishes a story.
16:15How did they get the bees to swarm like that?
16:21Some sort of magic?
16:23Magic?
16:25What?
16:26Where they put the queen in Beesbury's coffin.
16:30Oh!
16:32Fucking bee magic.
16:33My poor sweet warrior.
16:35All that fighting's turned your brains to applesauce.
16:48Serving boy!
16:49My cat.
17:10Have you no shame coming here?
17:15Those men are dead because of you.
17:24Will you take Egg to Squire?
17:31I told you, Father. He's not my concern.
17:37You know, my brother wasn't always such a little monster.
17:43Egg is no monster.
17:45He's just a bully.
17:46I didn't mean Egg, but no doubt we'll make a man of him too.
17:55Perhaps the seeds of manless are sown in the womb, as the maesters say.
18:02But Arian was quite the glad child once.
18:05He liked fishing.
18:09Heoid of dressing with him.
18:09I have to go in and let him get out of the way.
18:09He was a jerk.
18:22He was beautiful.
18:26He was a saint.
18:32He was a soldier of the self-sown.
18:33He was anointed man.
18:33He was a soldier of the time.
18:35He was a soldier of a plague.
20:08What?
20:10Sir Duncan, my lord, requests an audience.
20:28I want you to know I do not blame you for ruining my name day.
20:31It was a rotten thing they've done to you.
20:33And you were right in your reply.
20:38Thanks.
20:46Speak quick and get rid of this place.
20:50Before your brother died, he said the round needed good men.
20:54What of it?
20:56I will take Egg to Squire.
20:59But not at Summerhall.
21:03I thought you were done with princes.
21:05Egg is no prince.
21:07Not yet.
21:10Might be he's better served away from castles and servants and...
21:16His family.
21:22If you would consent, I would bring him on the road with me.
21:28He'll learn to Squire as I did.
21:31Or sleep in inns.
21:34Stables.
21:36And now and again in the halls of some landed knight or lesser lordling.
21:44Maybe under a tree when we must.
21:46I forbid him to live as a peasant.
21:50Egg on his blood of the dragon.
21:53He cannot sleep in ditches and eat hard salt beef.
22:01Daren never slept in a ditch.
22:06All the beef Arian ever ate was...
22:10taken rare and bloody.
22:22He's my last son.
22:24He's my last son.
22:47He's my last son.
22:48Sweetfoot.
22:53What are you doing here, girl?
22:59A Haysaline will want you for a stag.
23:01Storm End's a sad place.
23:04Figured an old friend might brighten it up for you.
23:09You bought me a horse?
23:16I won't be going with Lionel.
23:20What will you do then?
23:22Well, I should have done all the land.
23:25Right-haired in the other direction.
23:29What about you?
23:31I don't know.
23:33Father always spoke about building out the cider business.
23:36Opening a new barreling outfit.
23:40Cider?
23:42Well, she'd have your sweetfoot back, in any matter.
23:51She's not mine.
23:54Not anymore.
23:58Besides,
24:00I think an orchard might suit her better.
24:04What?
24:06I can't.
24:09Are you certain?
24:11She's a fine animal.
24:16Hello there, sweetfoot.
24:17Do you like apples?
24:19Do you like apples?
24:45Hmm?
24:47Why isn't he?
24:55It's...
24:59Hmm.
25:01Uh...
25:02podcasts,
25:04Hmm, hmm.
25:04dog voices.
25:05Hmm.
25:05Hmm, Hmm.
25:05Hmm, hmm, hmm.
25:06Hmm, hmm, hmm.
25:31Oh, my God.
25:49I don't know, Chestnut. Stop asking me. Where would the old man go?
26:04Sir Duncan!
26:09My Lord Father says I am to serve you.
26:21Serve you, sir. Chestnut's yours. Treat her kindly.
26:29And I don't want to find you on thunder unless I put you there.
26:35Where are we going, sir?
26:37Don't know.
26:40Suppose we could go anywhere in the Seven Kingdoms, though I've never been to...
26:46What?
26:48There are nine kingdoms, sir.
26:50Of what?
26:52The realm.
26:55Are you mad?
26:56Is that relevant?
26:58There are Seven Kingdoms of the realm, boy. Everyone knows that.
27:02Then everyone is wrong.
27:03Do you want a clout in the air?
27:05Crownlands, Westerlands, Stormlands, Riverlands, the Iron Islands, the North, the Reach, the Vale of Arran and Dorne.
27:17No, but...
27:18I've never been over the Red Mountains before.
27:21I hear they have good puppets in dawn.
27:23There.
27:51Thank you, sir.
27:52You're welcome.
27:53I don't know.
28:26Where's Aegon?
28:27I've not seen him, my prince.
28:28I will ask the septons.
28:32Where the fuck is he?
28:36Some people say a man is made out of mud.
28:40A poor man's made out of muscle and blood.
28:43Muscle and blood and skin and bones.
28:47A mind that's weak and a back that's strong.
28:50You load sixteen tons, what do you get?
28:53Another day older and deeper in debt.
28:56St. Peter, don't you call me cause I can't go.
29:00I owe my soul to the company store.
29:09I was born one morning when the sun didn't shine.
29:13I picked up my shovel and I walked to the mine.
29:16I loaded sixteen tons, a number nine coal.
29:20And the straw boss said, well, bless my soul, you load sixteen tons.
29:25What do you get another day older and deeper in debt?
29:30St. Peter, don't you call me cause I can't go.
29:33I owe my soul to the company store.
29:42I was born one morning, it was drizzling rain.
29:47Fighting and trouble are my middle name.
29:50I was raised in a cane, break by an old mama lying.
29:53Can't know a high-toned woman, make me walk the line.
29:56You load sixteen tons, what do you get?
30:00Another day older and deeper in debt.
30:03St. Peter, don't you call me cause I can't go.
30:07I owe my soul to the company store.
30:16I owe my soul to the company store.
30:30St. Peter, don't you call me cause I can't go.
30:33I owe my soul to the company store.
30:34I owe my soul to the company store.
30:34I owe my soul to the company store.
30:34I owe my soul to the company store.
30:34I owe my soul to the company store.
30:35I owe my soul to the company store.
30:37I owe my soul to the company store.
30:38I owe my soul to the company store.
30:38I owe my soul to the company store.
30:38I owe my soul to the company store.
30:39I owe my soul to the company store.
30:39I owe my soul to the company store.
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