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Previously
on
An
Apocalypse
of
Ice:


Sadly,
it
was
4me
to
say
goodbye
to
Mal,
who
had
been
a
wonderful
heir
and
will
always
be
a
darling
Sim.

Will’s
first
official
act
as

the
new
Stark
heir
was
to
start
planning
for
the
future.

If
all
goes
according
to
that
plan,
Will,
Arthur,
and
Sabriel
will
be
liEing

Gamer,
Show
Business,
and
Business
respec4vely.

His
next
official
act
as
heir
involved
helping
Brandon
decide
who
his
successor

as
The
Law
will
be.

More
accurately,
“successors,”
as
Arthur
and
Sabriel
will
be
sharing
the
posi4on.

Also,
in
our
latest
soap
opera

development,
BriNany
told
Julian
that
she’s
pregnant.

Hilarity
ensued.


[Note:
My
new
banner
features
a
screenshot
from
the
HBO
trailer
for
A
Game
of
Thrones
(EEEE!).

Obviously,
I
don’t
own
this,

either.

Only
the
Sims
on
the
right
are
mine!]

At
nine
o’clock
that
morning,
just
like
every
other
morning,
Jan
Tellerman
walked
downstairs
to
catch
her
ride
to
work.

But
these

were
a
different
set
of
stairs
in
a
different
house,
and
the
house
s4ll
didn’t
feel
like
her
own.

What
was
she
doing
here?

Wai4ng

to
marry
someone
she
barely
knew,
and
living
in
the
same
house
with
someone
she
had
loved
in
the
mean4me?

What
had
she

been
thinking?

She
remembered
tossing
water
balloons
around
with
Will.

Now
that
had
been
a
stupid
idea
if
there
ever
was
one,
because
the

ground
hadn’t
even
thawed.

But
he
seemed
like
a
decent
person,
and
she
wanted
to
try
to
give
him
a
chance.

But
Jan
wanted
Will
to
stop
smiling
and
stop
trying
to
flirt
with
her.

She
should
be
okay
with
it,
since
it
was
what
she
had
signed

up
for,
but
she
s4ll
wanted
him
to
let
her
be.

At
least
Will
didn’t
look
like…like
Julian.

It
was
going
to
be
okay.

Jan
wouldn’t
have
to
look
at
Will
for
a
liNle
less
than
a
year,
and
maybe
that
would
give
her
4me
to
heal.


She
had
to
believe
that
this
risk
would
pay
off.



She
learned
that
day
that
it
was
literally
paying
off
in
the
form
of
a
fiEy‐thousand
dollar
grant
to
fund
her
research.

Jan
had
not‐
so‐casually
men4oned
that
she
was
going
to
be
married
to
the
new
Stark
heir.

Apparently,
that
really
did
mean
that
they
were

taking
her
more
seriously
at
work.

The
promo4on
that
she
wanted
didn’t
feel
so
far
out
of
reach
now.

So
Jan
hit
the
books
again,
happier
about
her
studies
than
she
had
ever
been
before.

There
was
s4ll
so
much
to
research.

Why
did
it
snow
all
the
4me?

What
else
could
you
do
with
a
computer?

Could
the
story
that

Sansa
Stark
used
to
have
a
telephone
that
she
carried
around
in
her
pocket
be
true?





Some4mes,
Chris
joined
her.

She
had
decided
to
use
whatever
4me
she
had
leE
to
max
all
her
skills,
which
seemed
like
as
good
a

way
of
coping
as
any
other.


But
she
and
Julian
mostly
avoided
each
other.

It
had
to
be
for
the
best.

So
Jan
mostly
kept
to
herself
and
con4nued
reading
un4l
she
thought
she
had
all
the
informa4on
she
needed
to
make
her
next

proposal.

If
everything
went
as
planned,
like
it
had
lately,
she
would
be
in
line
for
a
promo4on.

Jan
didn’t
know
if
she
dared
to

think
about
that,
though.

What
if
it
didn’t
work
out?

Brandon
headed
out
of
the
bathroom
and
tried
to
smile.

Today
was
going
to
be
a
good
day.

He
would
go
in
to
work,
issue
the

orders
and
opinions
he
had
wriNen
over
the
last
week,
and
make
his
plans
to
turn
the
office
over
to
Arthur
and
Sabriel.

“The
opinion
of
the
trial
court
is
reversed,
and
the
case
is
remanded
for
further
proceedings
not
inconsistent
with
this
opinion.

It

is
so
ordered.”

Brandon
leE
the
courtroom
right
aEer
handing
down
his
opinion
to
go
to
the
office.
Some4mes,
he
wanted
to
talk
to
the
people

in
the
courtroom,
but
it
was
probably
more
professional
to
go.

The
Law
was
supposed
to
be
a
liNle
distant.




How
many
more
of
those
opinions
would
he
have
a
chance
to
write
and
hand
down?

“Hi,
Brandon,”
his
assistant
said
as
he
walked
into
the
office.


“Hi,
Natalie.”

Brandon
gave
her
a
finger‐gun.

“What’s
going
on?”


“The
usual.

I
finished
proofreading
your
opinion
in
the
fraud
case,
and
you’re
mee4ng
with
Piper
in
about
fiEeen
minutes.”

“Shit.

I
forgot
he
was
coming.”

“He’s
not
that
bad,
Brandon.”


“That’s
because
you
were
swooning
over
him
the
last
4me
he
was
here.”


“No,
I
wasn’t.”

Natalie
shook
her
head.



“I
know
what
swooning
looks
like.

My
brother’s
a
Romance
Sim.”

Brandon
walked
a
few
paces
away
from
Natalie’s
desk,
then

turned
back.

“Anyway,
you’re
never
going
to
admit
it.

Why
am
I
mee4ng
with
him?”


“It’s
the
monthly
mee4ng
about
new
legisla4on.”

Natalie
stared
at
Brandon
as
if
something
was
wrong
with
him.

Maybe

something
was.


“Great.”

Brandon
pointed
as
if
he
was
arguing
a
case.

“Let’s
see
what
he’s
managed
to
talk
the
Lollipop
Guild
into
vo4ng
for
this

4me.”

“They’re
just
ordinary
people,
Brandon,”
Natalie
said.

“Like
me.

They’re
not
poli4cians.

They’re
just
trying
to
pass
some
decent

laws
that’ll
help
people
when
they’re
not
at
their
day
jobs.

I
think
it’s
noble
of
them.”


Brandon
didn’t
share
Natalie’s
op4mism,
but
he
didn’t
want
to
fight
with
her
when
he’d
have
to
fight
with
Piper
in
a
few
minutes.


“Noble
or
not,
the
problem
is
that
he’s
a
poli4cian.

Not
that
I
want
to
talk
about
Piper
any
more
than
I
have
to.”


So
he
changed
the
subject:
“I
liked
going
to
see
the
kids
at
Oldtown
last
weekend.”


“How
are
they
doing?”

Natalie
asked.


“Fantas4c.”

Brandon
smiled.

“I
can’t
say
enough
good
things
about
these
kids.

Some4mes,
I
can’t
believe
I
helped
raise
them.


Will’s
going
to
be
a
great
heir,
and
Arthur
and
Sabriel…”

Brandon
stopped
talking,
suddenly
aware
that
it
might
not
be
a
good
idea

to
tell
everyone
about
them.

Even
though
he
trusted
Natalie
with
a
lot
of
things,
he
had
been
preNy
forthcoming
about
his
plans

for
Lily
to
succeed
him.

Look
what
had
happened.

“Everybody
likes
Arthur,”
he
con4nued.

“He
likes
almost
everyone,
but
he’s
no
pushover.

And
Sabriel
can
be
a
liNle
scary,
but
in
a

good
way.

You
know
what
I
mean?”


“Not
really.”

Brandon
thought
about
that.

“She’s
intense,”
he
said.

“If
there’s
something
she
wants,
she
won’t
stop
un4l
she
gets
it.

Barely

thinks
of
anything
else.

And
she
wanted
to
be
the
heir.

I
was
worried
about
her,
but
when
I
came
to
see
them,
she
looked
beNer

than
ever.

All
three
kids
were
gebng
along,
and
she
had
all
kinds
of
plans
for
what
she
was
going
to
do
aEer
college.”

He
smiled

again.

“I
am
so
proud
of
these
kids.”

Someone
knocked.

“Great,”
Brandon
muNered,
before
raising
his
voice
to
say,
“Come
in.”

The
door
to
his
office
opened
to
admit
Pius
Piper.

Somehow,
he
always
looked
like
he
was
amused
about
something.

Brandon

didn’t
like
that.

Mal
had
smiled
all
the
4me,
but
Mal
did
it
because
he
was
just
that
nice.

Piper’s
smile
looked
more
like
a
smirk
to

Brandon.




What
troubled
him
more
was
the
fact
that
no
one
else
seemed
to
no4ce.

Somehow,
Piper
had
managed
to
gather
a
coali4on
in

the
legislature
that
passed
laws
that
weren’t
in
anyone’s
interest,
with
the
“once
fired,
you’re
out”
law
at
the
top
of
the
list.

Was

Brandon
just
being
paranoid,
or
was
he
just
the
only
one
who
wasn’t
being
hoodwinked?

“Hello,
Piper,”
Brandon
said.

“I
guess
you’ve
come
to
talk
about
the
household
size
law,
and
it’s
simple.

There
s4ll
isn’t
a
ghost
of

a
chance—“


“Allow
me
to
explain—“

“What
would
you
have
us
do
if
there
are
more
than
six
people
in
a
household?

Toss
so‐called
‘extra’
people
into
the
snow
with

nowhere
to
go?

I
can’t
believe
you’re
advoca4ng
for
such
an
inhumane
law.”

“The
only
inhumane
thing
is
when
so
many
people
are
crammed
into
such
4ny
buildings,”
Piper
replied.

“Have
you
lived
in
a

house
with
more
than
six
people?”


“I
have.

My
brothers,
my
sister‐in‐law,
and
my
nieces
and
nephews.

It
was
cramped,
but
it’s
not
exactly
the
health
and
fire
hazard

you
think.

Separa4ng
people
from
their
families—that’s
cruel.”

Piper
con4nued
as
if
Brandon
hadn’t
said
anything.

“Your
concerns
about
people
being
unceremoniously
thrown
into
the
snow

are
touching,
but
everything
will
be
beNer
this
way.

Business
will
come
along
and
pick
up
any
slack.”

“Do
you
think
I
was
born
yesterday?

Private
business
hasn’t
‘come
along’
since…”

Since
when?

How
many
years
had
it
been

since
his
grandmother
returned
to
start
rebuilding?

Never
mind
that
his
niece
was
planning
something
that
would
hopefully

negate
the
impact
of
this
law
if
it
was
passed.

How
could
anyone
vote
for
this?

“While
you
try
to
remember,
we
can
discuss
what
I
actually
came
to
talk
about,”
Piper
said.

“Tell
us—who’s
going
to
be
next?”


“Next?”

“Who’s
going
to
be
your
successor?”

Piper
asked,
clasping
his
hands.

Brandon
put
his
hands
on
his
hips.

“You’ll
find
out.

I’m
not
dead
yet.”


“I
understand
if
you
don’t
want
to
say,”
he
con4nued.

“It
is
a
pity
that
Lily
can’t
do
it.

But
wouldn’t
it
make
a
more
orderly

transi4on
if
we
all
knew
who
it
was
going
to
be?”

“Yeah—I
don’t
care
about
that.”


“Oh,
surely
you
don’t
think—”

“How
about
if
you
get
the
hell
out
of
my
office
if
you
don’t
have
anything
else
to
say.”


Piper
didn’t
say
anything
at
first,
but
eventually,
he
smiled
again.

“If
that’s
what
you
want.

Goodbye,
Brandon
Stark.”

Brandon
tried
to
glare
at
Piper
as
he
walked
away
before
turning
to
the
computer
to
finish
the
will.

I
leave
the
office
of
Law
of
Winterfell
to
Arthur
and
Sabriel
Stark,
and
to
the
heirs
of
Arthur
and
Sabriel
Stark,
so
that
they
may

interpret
the
laws
of
Winterfell
and
advise
the
legislature
on
the
wisdom
of
their
laws,
he
typed.

Signed
on
this
date
the
27th
of

December,
BRANDON
STARK.


It
was
done.

He
would
print
the
document
and
sign
it,
with
Natalie
to
witness
the
signing
of
his
will.



Life
was
more
fun
when
you
had
a
job
to
do,
Sabriel
reflected.



Especially
if
you
could
take
breaks
to
build
snowmen,
because
economics
classes
were
mind‐numbingly
boring,
and
law
books

weren’t
much
beNer.

Just
when
Sabriel
had
thought
they
had
all
the
books
that
they
could
possibly
read,
someone
would
deliver

another
cartload
to
their
house.

They
were
all
so
heavy.

Statute
books.

Court
opinions.

Rules
of
evidence.

Model
jury

instruc4ons.

How
were
she
and
Arthur
supposed
to
read
all
of
them?

For
that
maNer,
how
were
they
supposed
to
take
all
the

books
back
to
Winterfell
with
them?

Maybe
that
was
how
Arthur
got
his
idea.


“There’s
so
much
in
these
books,”
Arthur
said
to
Sabriel.

“Shouldn’t
there
be
some
way
to
sum
them
up
in
just
a
few
pages?

Just

so
anyone
who’s
wondering
what
the
Code
is
all
about
can
look
at
those
pages
and
say,
that’s
what
it’s
about.”

“There
should,”
Sabriel
said.

“How
the
law
works
in
a
thousand
words
or
less,
or
something.

Just
so
that
if
you’re
not
familiar

with
it,
you
can
read
it.

And
so
if
you
have
any
ques4ons
about
how
a
law
works,
you
can
go
back
to
that
statement
and
figure
it

out
from
there.”



“Like
a
set
of
principles?”

Arthur
asked.

“Preven4ng
anarchy,
equality
before
the
courts,
that
sort
of
thing?”


“Yeah.”

Sabriel
grinned.

“We
really
are
going
to
be
good
at
this,
Arthur!”

They
also
greeted
almost
everyone
who
walked
by
and
recruited
them
to
be
either
study
partners
or
sounding
boards
for
their

studies
of
the
legal
system.




“No
way,”
Frances
said.

“The
law
does
not
say
that
you’re
not
guilty
of
a
crime
unless
the
judge
finds
you
did
it
beyond
a

reasonable
doubt.”


“Told
you
he
wouldn’t
believe
it,”
Sabriel
told
Arthur,
not
looking
up
from
her
book.

“Yeah,”
Arthur
said,
not
turning
away
from
the
screen.

“There’s
a
case
here
where
a
lawyer
tried
to
argue
that
‘beyond
a

reasonable
doubt’
only
meant
a
75%
chance
of
guilt.

From
the
transcript,
it
looks
like
Uncle
Brandon
laughed
him
out
of
court.”

“But
don’t
you
want
dangerous
criminals
locked
away,
even
if
you
don’t
have
so
much
proof
but
just
know?”

Frances
asked.


“It
makes
sense
at
first,”
Sabriel
said.

“It
looks
like
it
made
sense
to
Uncle
Brandon
at
first,
but
too
many
innocent
people
wound

up
gebng
locked
up.

He
didn’t
want
that.”

When
Arthur
didn’t
have
to
study
or
go
to
class,
he
liked
going
up
to
the
third
floor
hot
tub
to
relax.

Sabriel
s4ll
did
not
like
chess,
but
she
was
learning
that
it
was
necessary.


She
needed
logic
skill
for
almost
everything
that
she

wanted
to
do,
and
it
couldn’t
hurt
during
adventures
if
she
had
to
figure
out
some
kind
of
riddle
to
avoid
a
fatal
trap
or
decide

whether
to
cut
the
red
wire
or
the
blue
wire.

Some4mes
she
s4ll
thought
about
being
the
heir,
but
not
very
oEen.

They
were
all
working
too
hard
to
think
about
that.

What

was
the
point?

And
when
the
computer
was
free,
Will
used
it
to
start
wri4ng
a
novel.

“Arthur,
Will
actually
is
wri4ng
a
romance
novel
now.

Help.”

Sabriel
told
him
during
a
game
of
red
hands.

“This
doesn’t
have
to
be
a
crisis.”

Arthur
tried
to
grab
one
of
Sabriel’s
hands,
but
she
snatched
it
away.

“He’s
not
publishing
it,
is

he?”


“I
don’t
know.

It
might
just
be
to
increase
his
crea4vity.”


“Okay.

We’ll
cross
that
bridge
when
we
come
to
it.”


“And
in
the
mean4me,
I
wouldn’t
suggest
reading
it.”

Like
Sabriel,
Will
also
spent
a
lot
of
4me
at
the
chessboard,
though
he
didn’t
hate
it
as
much
as
she
did.

By
now,
moving
the

pieces
had
almost
become
mechanical
as
he
thought
up
different
strategies
for
each
side
and
played
them
to
their
conclusions.

It

was
a
good
way
to
think.

So
far,
things
were
going
well,
but
Will
was
star4ng
to
feel
trapped
at
college.

Arthur
and
Sabriel
were
in
their
own
world
a
lot
of

the
4me,
and
there
wasn’t
much
to
do
but
skill.

The
real
world
wasn’t
going
to
be
anything
like
this.

Why
was
he
s4ll
here?


“You
brooding
again?”

Arthur
asked,
sibng
down
across
from
Will.


“I
guess.”


“What
about?”

“Sabriel
didn’t
want
to
be
forgoNen,”
Will
said.

“I
don’t
want
that,
either.”


“What
do
you
mean?”


“What’s
going
to
happen
once
I’m
out
there?”

Will
asked.

“I
want
to
be
there—I
don’t
know
what’s
leE
for
me
to
do
here—but
I

can’t
be
excited
about
going
home
when
I
don’t
have
any
idea
what
I’m
in
for.”

“What’s
leE
for
you
to
do?

Enjoy
the
next
few
months
while
you
can,”
Arthur
said.

He
s4ll
didn’t
know
what
to
make
of
the
“not

wan4ng
to
be
forgoNen”
comment,
so
he
ignored
that.

“You
don’t
have
to
spend
all
your
4me
on
your
plan.

Come
up
to
the
hot

tub
and
chill
some4me.

And
if
you
keep
up
what
you
did
with
gebng
both
of
us—me
and
Sabriel
to
be
the
Law,
then
everything’s

going
to
be
fine
once
you
get
home,
too.”

Sabriel
had
less
pa4ence
for
Will’s
bad
moods.


“Don’t
be
a
dork,”
she
told
him.

“You’re
no
fun
when
you’re
all
up
in
your
head.

And
I
want
you
to
wake
up
instead
of
moving

pieces
like
you’re
s4ll
playing
against
yourself.

I’d
rather
have
you
using
all
your
logic
points
so
you
can
actually
appreciate
it
when

I
take
your
queen
in
a
few
moves.”

Will
couldn’t
shake
the
feeling
that
something
terrible
was
about
to
happen
or
had
already
happened,
though.

He
decided
to
go

for
a
walk,
but
didn’t
make
it
far
before
mee4ng
a
girl
outside
the
house.

“I
thought
I’d
seen
a
ghost
out
there!”

Katy
Hart
told
Will.

“I’d
been
hoping
to
see
a
ghost,
but
I
didn’t
think
it’d
be
like
this,
if

what
I
saw
even
was
a
ghost…”
She
shuddered.

“But
you
wanted
to
know
what
had
me
walking
by
your
house
at
this
4me
of

night,
and
that
was
it.”


“Why
don’t
you
come
in,
then?”

Will
asked.

“At
least
un4l
the
ghost
is
gone?”

“I’m
glad
you
didn’t
mind
coming
in
for
a
game,”
Will
said
as
he
set
out
the
chess
pieces.

“Usually
I
just
play
against
my
brother
or

sister.

Or
against
myself.”

“Really?”

she
asked.

“A
Romance
Sim
like
you,
playing
against
yourself?”

“I—How
did
you
know
I
was
Romance?”

Will
asked.



“Oh,
it’s
preNy
easy
to
tell,”
Jan
Tellerman
said,
her
eyes
narrowed.

Will
dropped
his
chess
piece.

“What?”

“I
didn’t
say
anything,”
Katy
said,
not
looking
up
from
the
chessboard.

“Not
yet,
anyway.”

“Right.”

Will
looked
down
again.


Katy
didn’t
even
look
like
Jan.

Their
features
were
totally
different,
except
for
the
color
of
their
eyes.

They
had
the
same
cold,

blue
eyes.


“I’m
sorry,”
he
said.

“I
think
I’d
beNer
get
back
to
studying.”

Katy
got
up.

“You
sure?”
she
asked.

“It
didn’t
seem
like
you
wanted
to
study
to
me.”

“No.

I
didn’t—but
I
should.”

Will
waved.

“Hopefully
I’ll
see
you
around.”

But
aside
from
reminders
of
responsibility,
things
went
well
at
the
house
for
the
next
few
months.

“Arthur
and
I
have
finals
in
a
few
hours,”
Sabriel
said
over
that
night’s
spagheb.




“Good
luck.”


“Thanks.

We’ll
probably
be
gone
when
the
taxi
comes
for
you,
though.”

“Right.

I’d
forgoNen
about
the
taxi.”

Here
it
was,
then.

He’d
been
wai4ng
to
go
back
to
Winterfell
ever
since
the
end
of
his
last

visit,
but
now
he
wanted
to
stay
at
the
college
house
and
leave
responsibility
alone.

“Hey,
don’t
go
glum,”
Sabriel
said.

“I
know
Arthur
and
I
are
awesome
and
you’re
going
to
miss
us
a
ton,
but
you’ll
be
fine.

You’d

beNer
be.

I
don’t
want
to
have
to
come
by
the
house
and
smack
you.”

Will
forced
a
laugh.

“Thanks
for
the
vote
of
confidence
there.”

“You
bet.”

Sabriel
paNed
him
on
the
shoulder.

“It’s
like
there
are
two
versions
of
you:
the
heir
who
can
be
awesome
and
the
just

plain
idio4c
big
brother.

Stay
the
first
version.”


“I’ll
try.”

Will
hugged
her.

“Good
luck
with
college
and
the
rest
of
those
finals—I
mean,
finals
and
the
rest
of
college.

I’ll
try
to
get

away
every
so
oEen
and
visit.”

“Bye,
Will,”
Arthur
said
next.

“I
hope
your
plan
works,
because
I
don’t
want
to
wait
another
three
years
before
seeing
you
again.”

“I
hope
so,
too,”
Will
said.

“At
least
you
can
probably
call
me
while
the
phones
are
working,
if
you
need
to.

I
usually
couldn’t
do

that
because
I
was
working
too
hard
trying
to
stay
alive.”

That
seemed
like
such
a
long
4me
ago
now.

Had
Will
really
survived

three
years
without
everything
he
took
for
granted?

“And
I’ll
call
you
when
I
can.

I’ll
probably
need
legal
advice
or
just
plain

brother
advice.”

“I
think
I
can
do
that,”

Arthur
said.

“Good
luck,
Will.”

“You
too.”

Will
hugged
Arthur.

“Find
a
nice
guy.

Or
several.”

When
the
doorbell
rang,
Will
got
up
from
the
chess
table
and
asked
no
one
in
par4cular,
“Do
I
have
to?”

Then
he
answered
himself,
“Yes,”
and
started
his
transi4on.

The
results
were
neither
especially
awesome
nor
especially
terrible,
but
Will
thought
a
confeb
shower
always
did
wonders
for

self‐esteem.

So
Will
changed
into
his
outerwear
and
leE
the
house
he
had
transformed
with
his
brother
and
sister
behind.

Aliena
gave
birth
to
her
son
in
the
middle
of
the
night,
not
long
aEer
a
burglar
had
snuck
into
the
house
and
made
off
with
most

of
the
furniture
on
the
first
floor.

She
and
Jocelyn
named
him
Kay.


Some4mes,
it
seemed
like
he
had
more
than
his
share
of
childhood
illnesses,
but
Kay
eventually
grew
into
a
toddler
who
didn’t

like
anything
as
much
as
trying
to
crawl
down
the
stairs
and
hated
nothing
more
than
being
alone.


It
took
a
long
4me
for
him
to
start
speaking.

Once
he
did,
the
smile
stayed
on
Ali’s
face
for
days.

Jocelyn
kept
trying
to
figure
out
just
how
her
wife
had
goNen
pregnant,
but
her
confusion
over
where
this
baby
came
from
didn’t

stop
her
from
giving
him
a
few
snuggles
before
returning
to
her
books.

Even
Alayne
liked
Kay.

Ali
no4ced
that
she
seemed
more
like
herself
aEer
playing
with
him.

She
didn’t
know
what
“herself”

meant
for
one
of
the
undead,
but
she
had
expected
to
meet
someone
like
this,
who
seemed
to
care
about
her
baby
almost
as

much
as
she
did.

As
she
watched
Alayne
sit
by
her
son
as
he
played
with
his
toy
rabbit,
Ali
remembered
that
everyone
had
liked

Sansa.

“I
had…”
Alayne
trailed
off
as
she
looked
down
at
Kay’s
crib.

“No.

I
had
a
daughter.

Did
I?”


Ali
nodded.

“Her
name
was
Eowyn.”

“Eowyn,”
she
said,
hugging
herself
as
if
she
could
hug
her
daughter
that
way.

“She…she
must
have
had
such
a
hard
4me…”

She

turned
back
to
Ali.

“What
happened
to
her?”

Ali
knew
some
of
her
story,
but
she
didn’t
want
to
upset
Alayne
when
she
was
ac4ng
normally
for
once.

“She
put
up
a
good
fight,”

Ali
said.

“She
did
her
best.”

“Good,”
Alayne
said.

“I
want
to
do
my
best,
too.”


“I
know.”



That
was
the
problem.

Alayne
didn’t
stay
kind.




“Yes,”
she
said
to
someone
on
the
other
end
of
the
phone,
giggling
like
a
teenager.

“Yes,
that’s
me.”

Alayne
paused.

“Of
course.

I

would
be
happy—no,
delighted—to
meet
with
you.

I
can
leave
for
work
early
and
meet—yes,
there,
at
9:30.

Excellent.”

“What
is
she
doing?”

Aliena
asked
Jocelyn.


“Does
it
maNer?”

Jocelyn
asked.

“She’s
her
own
person.”

“She’s
not.

She
should
be
dead.”

Ali
stared
into
space.

Every
4me
she
had
thought
this
could
be
over,
she
thought,
everything

became
jumbled
again.

“But
she
isn’t.

And
as
long
as
she’s
not
dead…”
Jocelyn
trailed
off.

“I’m
not
saying
that
I
feel
comfortable
around
her.

But
I
don’t

have
anything
beNer
to
suggest
than
what
we’re
doing
now.

And
maybe
she’s
changing.

She
cares
about
Kay.

Maybe
he
can
help

her.”

Jocelyn
reached
for
Ali’s
hand.

“Hold
on.

It
might
not
be
as
bad
as
you
think.”

Ali
disagreed,
but
she
didn’t
have
anything
concrete
to
back
up
her
suspicions
un4l
the
day
that
Kay
called
Alayne
“mama.”


“I’m
not
one
of
your
mamas,”
she
said
to
him.

“I’m
Sansa.

Say
it
with
me.”


“San‐sa.”


“Good.”

She
smiled
and
reached
out
to
4ckle
him.




“Who?”

Kay
asked.



“Who
am
I?”


Kay
nodded
his
head.

“I
made
this
place,”
Alayne
said.

“Everything
you
and
your
mamas
have?

It
was
because
of
me.

I
did
that.

And
I
want
to
do
more

for
you.”

She
held
Kay
4ghtly.

“You’ll
let
me
do
that,
won’t
you?”


Aliena
narrowed
her
eyes.

She
had
heard
enough.

Alayne
had
to
go
for
Kay’s
own
good.

How
could
her
own
son
think
that

woman
was
one
of
his
mothers?

Who
knew
what
else
she
would
tell
him?

Who
knew
if
Kay
would
believe
it?

Her
decision
was

made,
and
she
would
not
give
Jocelyn
a
chance
to
sway
her.


“Alayne,”
she
said.

“Just
a
minute.”

The
other
woman
set
Kay
down
in
his
crib
and
hugged
him
before
turning
to
Ali,
looking
as
innocent
as
ever.

Ali

tried
not
to
scream
as
she
watched
her
baby
reach
out
to
the
woman.

“What
is
it?”


“You
need
to
leave.”

“Get
away
from
my
son.

You
need
to
leave.”

“What
do
you
mean?”

Alayne
asked,
smiling.

It
almost
looked
genuine.


“I
don’t
want
someone
like
you
near
my
son.”

She
would
have
said
more,
but
Alayne
interrupted
her:
“Someone
like
me?”

Her
voice
rose.

“You
really
think
that
I’m
a
bad

influence
on
him,
when
I
can
do
so
much
more
for
him
than
you
ever
could?”


“You’re
not
his
mother!”

“Aliena,
pubng
on
her
uniform
and
running
off
to
play
the
hero,”
Alayne
sneered.

“You
wouldn’t
know
a
hero
if
she
was
living

right
next
to
you.

Answer
me
this:
Do
you
really
think
that
you
can
stop
me
from
doing
anything
I
want
to
do?

What
makes
you

think
you
ever
had
any
control
over
me?”


“Alayne—“


“SANSA.

My
name
is
Sansa.

Don’t
you
ever
call
me
that
name
again.”

She
raised
her
fist.

“I
did
more
than
you
can
ever
begin
to

imagine,
and
I’m
just
gebng
started.

And
now
you
want
to
give
up
your
last
bit
of
control
over
me.”

She
laughed.

“Your
last
iNy

biNy
shred
of
control…”

Ali
wondered
if
she
was
doing
the
right
thing,
but
that
was
probably
what
Alayne
wanted
her
to
think.

Besides,
she
had
wanted
to

be
free
of
the
woman
for
years.

“Go.”







“I
need
to
make
a
phone
call
before
you
throw
me
out.”


“Why?”


“So
I
can
have
a
place
to
go.

You
wouldn’t
toss
me
out
into
the
snow,
all
cold
and
alone,
without
anyone
at
all
to
help
me,
would

you?

You’re
not
like
that.

You
think
you’re
beNer
than
that.”

Alayne
laughed
again.

Ali
opened
and
closed
her
mouth.

The
phones
probably
wouldn’t
be
working,
anyway.

“Try
your
luck.

But
you’re
out
aEer
two

minutes.”

Amazingly,
aEer
all
her
protests
and
insane
ramblings,
the
woman
who
might
have
been
Sansa
Stark
was
gone.

Everything
would

be
all
right.

Kay
would
be
safe.

Jocelyn
would
be
just
as
relieved
as
she
was.

Now,
Ali
could
live
in
peace
again—as
much
peace

as
she
could
with
a
toddler
upstairs
who
would
probably
start
screaming
any
second
now.

She
sat
down
with
her
salad
and
began

to
eat,
finally
feeling
free.

No.

This
wasn’t
right.

But
aEer
a
few
bites,
she
knew
that
something
had
gone
terribly
wrong.

She
wanted
to
scream,
but
she
couldn’t
even
breathe.


Her
last
word
came
out,
barely
audible:
“A—layne—“

Next
4me
on
An
Apocalypse
of
Ice:


+
Will
comes
home
and
starts
seNling
in
as
heir.

+
Time
to
start
liEing
restric4ons
again!

+
And
the
4me
comes
to
transfer
power
over
to
Arthur
and
Sabriel.

Kay,
you
are
adorable.

I’m
sorry.

His
personality
is
10/2/9/3/1
(Virgo),
and
this
is
not
the
last
you’ll
be
seeing
of
him.


Happy
Simming!


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