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The morning sun broke over the Wolfswood, casting long, pale beams of light across the frost-covered fields outside Winterfell. The air was crisp, sharp enough to sting the lungs, but the cold did nothing to dampen the spirits of the North.

Ned Stark stood on the raised viewing platform, wrapped in his heavy grey cloak. Beside him sat Ashara, bundled in furs. Elia Martell sat nearby.

In a secure box slightly apart from the main throng, but with a clear view of the field, sat the children. Cregan was bouncing with excitent. Rhaenys was pointing at the banners. Jon was in the arms of a nursemaid (Wylla).

Standing guard over them, silent and imposing in a grey cloak over his mail, was Arthur Dayne. He did not watch the gas with the eyes of a reveler; he watched the crowd with the eyes of a hawk.

The morning began with the traditional arts of war.

The archery contest was first. A hundred n lined up, their breath misting in the air. There were yeon from the Winter Town, hunters from the Wolfswood, and squires dreaming of glory.

Howland Reed didn't participate, claiming it was unfair for a crannogman to compete against n who aid with their eyes rather than their spirits. Instead, the contest was dominated by a Glover archer, a man nad Hal, who put three shafts into the bullseye at two hundred paces.

Next ca the horse race.

This was a chaotic, thundering affair. The track was rough, winding through the fields and around a stand of sentinel trees.

---

As the sun reached its zenith, the mood shifted. The individual glory was done. Now, it was ti for the Pack.

Ned stood up. He walked to the railing of the platform.

"My Lords! People of the North!"

The crowd quieted, turning their faces to the Lord of Winterfell.

"You have seen the skill of the arrow," Ned shouted. "You have seen the speed of the horse. These are fine things. But the North does not survive by speed alone. It does not survive by one man standing apart."

He gestured to the muddy field below, where stewards were marking out a large rectangle with dust.

"We survive because we stand together! Shoulder to shoulder! Shield to shield!"

A roar of approval went up from the Umber section.

"I give you a new ga," Ned announced. "The Shield Wall."

He waited for the murmurs to die down.

"The rules are simple. Two teams. Fifteen n each. No weapons. No armor save for padding. You stand opposite each other at the center line."

Ned held up his hands, locking his fingers together.

"You bind yourselves. Arm over shoulder. Body against body. One mass. One wall. When the horn blows, you push."

He pointed to the lines marked twenty yards behind each team.

"You drive the enemy back. You break their line. You push them across their own retreat line. If a man falls, you help him up, but the wall must not break. If the line shatters, you lose. If you are pushed back, you lose."

The lords exchanged glances. It sounded simple. Primitive.

It sounded perfect.

"Every Lord may field a team," Ned shouted. "Fifteen of your best. Choose them well. Strength is good, but unity is better. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link."

The Greatjon stood up, his chair scraping loudly on the wood. "Fifteen Umbers? Stark, that's not a team, that's a siege engine! Who dares stand against the Giants?"

"I do!" Maege Mormont shouted. "My bears will push you back to the Last Hearth!"

"The Dreadfort accepts," Roose Bolton said softly, his voice cutting through the noise.

"White Harbor stands ready!" Wylis Manderly declared.

The platform erupted into a flurry of bets and boasts. Lords rushed down to their encampnts to select their champions.

---

Down on the field, the atmosphere was electric.

The Greatjon was walking among his n, slapping chests and squeezing biceps. He picked the biggest, ugliest n he could find. n who looked like they wrestled mammoths for fun.

"You!" Greatjon roared at a blacksmith. "You're wide as a barn. Get in line. You! Can you push a wagon? Good. Get in."

At the Manderly camp, it was a different strategy. Ser Wylis was choosing mass. He picked n who were heavy, solid, immovable objects.

Wylis instructed. "We don't run. We lean. Let them break themselves against our blubber."

At the Bolton camp, Roose selected n of dium build, but disciplined. n who stood in perfect formation. Silent. Grim.

And at the Stark camp...

Benjen Stark stood before the Wolfguard.

"We aren't the biggest," Benjen told the group of fifty young n and boys. "And we aren't the heaviest. If we try to out-muscle the Umbers, we'll be flattened."

He looked at the recruits. Ned had trained them well. Not just in fighting, but in conditioning.

"We are the fittest," Benjen said. "We can run all day. We can hold a squat until our legs burn. We have stamina."

They selected fifteen n. They weren't the largest. They were the ones who moved best together. The ones who had mastered the synchronized breathing exercises Ned had taught them.

"We are the Wall," Benjen told his team. "We do not break. Co on, lads. Just grit. We win this fair."

An hour later, the teams were assembled on the field.

Ned stood in the center, holding a helm filled with slips of parchnt.

"The leaders!" Ned called.

Greatjon Umber, Maege Mormont, Halys Hornwood, Rickard Karstark, Wylis Manderly, Galbart Glover, the Bolton leader, and Benjen Stark stepped forward.

"Draw your lot," Ned said.

Greatjon plunged his hand in. He pulled a slip. "Cerwyn."

Maege Mormont drew next. "Hornwood."

Wylis Manderly drew. "Karstark."

That left two.

Benjen reached into the helm. He pulled the last slip.

"Bolton," Benjen said.

He looked across the circle at the Dreadfort soldier.

---

The crowd roared as the teams lined up.

On the left, the Umbers. On the right, the Cerwyns.

"PUSH!"

The Umbers didn't just push; they surged. The Greatjon, anchoring the center, let out a roar. The Cerwyn line didn't stand a chance. They buckled instantly. The Umber line trampled over them, marching forward with unstoppable montum.

"Winner! House Umber!" Ned shouted.

Next up: Mormont vs. Hornwood.

Maege Mormont stood in the center of her line. "Roots!" Maege shouted to her team. "Dig in!"

The Hornwoods tried to use their height, pushing down. But the Mormonts got low. They drove their shoulders into the Hornwood hips.

"UP!" Maege commanded.

The Bear Island team surged upward, lifting the Hornwood front line off their feet. Denied traction, the foresters flailed and were driven back.

"Winner! House Mormont!"

Manderly vs. Karstark.

The Karstarks hit the Manderly line with a savage impact. But the Manderlys just absorbed it. They locked together into a wall of flesh and mail.

"Now," Wylis said calmly from the sideline. "Lean."

The Manderly line simply leaned forward. The weight was crushing. The exhausted Karstarks slowly began to slide backward, boots churning the mud, but unable to stop the avalanche.

"Winner! House Manderly!"

And finally. Stark vs. Bolton.

The Bolton team was disciplined. The Stark team looked like boys.

"They'll get crushed," Rickard Karstark muttered.

Benjen stood in the center. He looked at his team.

"Breathe," Benjen whispered.

The fifteen Stark boys inhaled in unison. They exhaled. They closed their eyes for a split second, centering themselves.

They locked arms. It wasn't just a grip; it was a weld.

"Ready!" Ned shouted. "PUSH!"

The Boltons hit hard. THUD-THUD-THUD.

The Stark line shuddered. They slid back a foot.

The crowd groaned.

"Hold!" Benjen's voice was calm.

The Wolfguard dropped their hips. They synchronized their steps. They didn't fight the Bolton montum; they grounded it.

The Bolton line stalled. They pushed, but it was like pushing against a castle wall. The Boltons exerted themselves, veins popping. They were burning energy.

Benjen saw it. The sweat. The ragged breathing.

"NOW!" Benjen shouted. "DRIVE!"

The Stark team moved as one. They surged forward with an explosive release of stored energy, the result of months of sprint drills.

The Bolton line, overextended and tiring, wasn't ready. The Starks hit the gaps between the shoulders.

"Drive!" Benjen yelled.

With a final, unified heave, the Wolfguard shattered the Bolton formation. The Dreadfort n stumbled back and were shoved unceremoniously across the defeat line.

"Winner! House Stark!" Ned roared.

The crowd erupted. The boys beat the n.

Umber vs. Mormont was a brawl. It lasted five minutes. The sheer stamina of the Umbers finally wore down the Bears. Umber advanced.

Stark vs. Manderly.

The Manderlys used their "Lean" tactic.

Benjen waited until the last second. "SHIFT!"

The Stark line didn't push back. They pivoted. The entire line swung the gate open to the left, angling their bodies.

The Manderlys, leaning with all their weight, found no resistance. They stumbled forward, their montum carrying them past the Stark line.

The Stark team slamd into their exposed flank. It was a textbook wrestling maneuver executed by fifteen people. The Manderly line collapsed under its own weight.

"Winner! House Stark!"

The Final

House Stark vs. House Umber.

The Giants against the Wolves.

The Greatjon stood at the line. "You've got tricks, little Stark," Greatjon rumbled. "But tricks don't stop a mountain."

"We aren't tricks," Benjen said. "We're the Pack."

They locked up.

The horn blew.

It was the hardest thing Benjen had ever felt. The Umber line hit them with the force of a landslide. The Stark line bent. They slid back. One yard. Two yards.

"HOLD!" Benjen scread, his heels digging furrows in the frozen mud.

They held. Barely.

The Greatjon roared, pushing. He was a force of nature.

Benjen gritted his teeth. He felt the exhaustion in his boys. He wanted to reach out with the Force, for strength, but he stopped himself. No. Fair fight. We trained for this.

"Breathe!" Benjen shouted. "Find the rhythm!"

The Wolfguard synchronized their breathing. In. Out. In. Out. Their panic subsided. Their muscles found new reserves of oxygen.

The Umbers pushed, but they were tiring. They were big n, and big n burn fuel fast. The Wolfguard had lungs like bellows.

"They're tired!" Benjen realized. "Now! HEAVE!"

The Starks pushed back. Inch by inch.

The Greatjon's eyes went wide. He pushed back, but his legs were burning. The relentless, steady pressure of the smaller n was breaking them.

The Stark line advanced. They reclaid the lost ground. They crossed the center.

"TOGETHER!" the Wolfguard chanted. "PUSH! PUSH! PUSH!"

With one final, agonized effort, they drove the Umbers back across the line.

The Greatjon stumbled, falling onto his back in the mud.

The horn blew.

"WINNER! HOUSE STARK!"

The crowd went insane.

Ned smiled. He looked at his brother, who was being hoisted onto the shoulders of the Wolfguard.

Up in the stands, Cregan clapped his hands, shouting "Ben! Ben!"

Arthur Dayne watched from the shadows of the box, his hand resting on the hilt of Dawn, a ghost of a smile on his face. The boys had done well.

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