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Wiki of Westeros

"When people ask you what happened here, tell them the North remembers. Tell them winter came for House Frey."
Arya Stark to Kitty Frey[src]

The assassinations at the Twins is one of the closing events of the War of the Five Kings, where former Faceless Man prodigy Arya Stark brutally murders Lord Walder Frey, the Lord of the Crossing, Lord of Riverrun, and Lord Paramount of the Trident, and most, if not all, of the male line of House Frey for their role in the Red Wedding. The event ultimately results in further chaos in the already war-ridden Riverlands.

History[]

Prelude[]

"For 300 years, we kissed Tully boots, swore oaths to them and their stinking fish banners. Not again! Riverrun is ours. Take it back!"
Walder Frey to his sons Lothar Frey and Walder Rivers[src]

Since Aegon's Conquest, House Frey of the Twins has been a vassal of House Tully of Riverrun, the Lords Paramount of the Trident. However, for their loyalty towards the Iron Throne - in reality, House Lannister - and for their actions during the Red Wedding in which Lord Walder Frey oversaw the massacre of King Robb Stark, Queen Talisa Stark, and Lady Catelyn Stark, as well as the Northern armies, Walder Frey is rewarded with Riverrun and is elevated to Lord Paramount of the Trident. During the Northern campaign, House Tully had allied with House Stark in securing independence for both the North and the Riverlands.

Meanwhile, Arya Stark was widely believed across Westeros to be dead. In reality, however, she escaped across the Narrow Sea to the Free City of Braavos, where she trained to become an assassin of the Faceless Men. Though she was able to learn some of their techniques and magic, she ended up leaving the guild, refusing to give up her identity, which is a requirement of its members.[1]

Events[]

"My name is Arya Stark. I want you to know that... the last thing you're ever going to see is a Stark smiling down at you as you die."
Arya Stark to Walder Frey just before cutting his throat.[src]

After leaving the Faceless Men, Arya returns to Westeros where she intends to continue crossing names off her death list. Though Walder's role in the deaths of her family at the Red Wedding is known far and wide, it is not entirely clear if Arya knew the full extent that his sons Black Walder and Lothar played, specifically killing her mother Catelyn and pregnant sister-in-law Talisa respectively. She eventually finds her way into the Twins, disguised as a servant girl during a banquet being held by the Freys with the Lannisters for their victory at the second siege of Riverrun, where she presumably learns about the deaths of Catelyn and Talisa and adds their killers to her list. At some point after the feast, Arya murders Lothar and Black Walder, and has them cooked into pies, which she later serves to Walder Frey.

AryaKillsWalderFrey

Arya slits Lord Walder's throat in the same manner her mother was killed.

While Walder eats the served pies, he notes that the servant girl is not one of his progeny as she is "too pretty", and slaps her rear. He then asks aloud where his "moron sons" are, to which the servant girl replies that they are right there - indicating that they are in the pies. When Walder realizes the horrible truth by lifting the crust and finding a human finger inside the pie, Arya reveals herself. She taunts him, saying the last thing he will ever see is a Stark smiling down at him as he dies. Walder attempts to flee, but Arya grabs him and slits his throat, watching with satisfaction as Walder bleeds out and chokes to death on his own blood.[2]

Afterwards, using Walder Frey's face, Arya invites the rest of the men of House Frey to a feast. She has wine that she describes as "the Arbor's gold" served to them which is in fact poisoned. As she goes on mocking them sarcastically as brave men for butchering guests, including Catelyn and Talisa, after Walder had offered them guest right at the Red Wedding, the Frey men begin to clutch at their throats, choking and gasping and finally dying as blood pours from their mouths. When the very last male Frey dies, Arya removes Walder Frey's face, revealing herself to the Frey women and servant girls. She then tells Kitty Frey, Walder's last wife, that when people ask what happened at the Twins, tell them that the North remembers and winter came for House Frey.[3]

Aftermath[]

"The Northerners will never forget."
Tyrion Lannister's warning to Tywin Lannister about the retribution for the Red Wedding that ultimately came true.[src]

With the orchestrators - Tywin Lannister, Roose Bolton, and Walder Frey - all dead, and House Frey on the brink of following House Bolton to certain extinction in name, if not blood, due to Arya's actions, the Red Wedding has been virtually avenged.

Recognizing this, Cersei considers the Freys no longer viable to help them stave off Daenerys Targaryen's invasion in the Last War and instead invites Euron Greyjoy to King's Landing to discuss an alliance. Still, soldiers of House Lannister are sent up to the Riverlands to keep the peace with word of the deaths of the Frey men at the Twins spreading across Westeros. Even so, their killer remains unknown.

In the books[]

In A Song of Ice and Fire novels, at least six (perhaps seven) Freys have been killed so far in revenge for the Red Wedding:

  • Petyr Pimple, Merrett, and Ryman have been hanged by the Brotherhood Without Banners on the order of Lady Stoneheart, the revived Catelyn Stark, who ruthlessly seeks vengeance on those responsible for the Red Wedding.
    • Of those, Ryman is the only one who actually took part in the massacre (he killed Dacey Mormont), while Petyr and Merrett's part was to get Greatjon Umber too drunk to fight, though even that is enough for the Brotherhood to condemn them.
    • Ryman's death made his son Edwyn the heir of the Twins.
  • Jared, Rhaegar, and Symond mysteriously disappear on their way from the White Harbor to Winterfell, to attend Ramsay Bolton's wedding, and are never found.
    • Hosteen and Aenys Frey grow worried about the absence of their kin, and ask the Boltons to look for them. Ramsay and his men ride back to where Lord Manderly claims they parted ways, but in vain. Roose speculates that since Lord Manderly’s litter moves very slowly, and his health does not permit him to travel more than a few hours a day, with frequent stops for meals, the missing Freys were anxious to reach Barrowton and be reunited with their kin, so they rode on ahead. Ramsay is not overly concerned with his failure to find them, dismissing the whole matter with "The world won’t miss a few Freys. There’s plenty more down at the Twins, should we ever have need of one".
    • It is speculated (and supported by Arya's deed in "The Winds of Winter") that Lord Wyman Manderly had them killed and baked into the three pies he brings to Ramsay's wedding, to avenge his son's death. He made sure that Roose and the two attending Frey officers - Hosteen and Aenys - would eat from the pies, then, for good measure, asked Abel the bard (actually Mance Rayder) to play the song about the Rat Cook.
    • Lord Manderly has not violated the guest right by killing those Freys, although they were his guests for a while: when asked by Ser Hosteen where they are, he answers innocently (or feigns innocence) "The road has many dangers, ser. I gave your brothers guest gifts when we took our leave of White Harbor. We swore we would meet again at the wedding" - thus, by giving the three Freys "guest gifts", they were no longer protected by the guest right, and technically, he was free to kill them.
  • "Little Walder", Merrett's nine-year-old son, is murdered at Winterfell. The identity and motive of his murderer(s) are unknown.
    • If Lord Manderly is responsible, then the motive was a payback for the Red Wedding. If the murderers are Mance Rayder and the spearwives (who presumably killed six other people in Winterfell), the murder had nothing to do with the Red Wedding, but was done in order to incite a brawl between the occupants of Winterfell, thus provide a distraction for rescuing "Arya Stark".
    • Hosteen Frey immediately confronts Lord Manderly, who denies the accusation but baits Hosteen into attacking him by remarking that Little Walder's death is perhaps a blessing as "he would have grown up to be a Frey."

Unlike in the show, Arya had nothing to do with the above killings - she is still in Braavos at that point; none was committed at the Twins; Lord Walder Frey is not one of those who ate from the Frey pies; he, Black Walder, Walder Rivers and Lothar are still alive by the point the books have reached. It is not mentioned in the books how Lord Frey reacted to these deaths.

References[]

Notes[]

  1. In "Winter Is Coming," which takes place in 298 AC, Sansa Stark tells Cersei Lannister that she is 13 years old and Bran Stark tells Jaime Lannister that he is 10 years old. Arya Stark was born between Sansa and Bran, making her either 11 or 12 in Season 1. The rest of the Stark children have been aged up by 2 years from their book ages, so it can be assumed that she is 11 in Season 1. Arya is 18 in Season 8 according to HBO, which means at least 7 years occur in the span of the series; therefore, each season of Game of Thrones must roughly correspond to a year in-universe, placing the events of Season 6 in 303 AC.
  2. In addition to Lord Walder Frey, Black Walder Rivers and Lothar Frey (all three killed before this event), Arya poisoned a total of 45 Freys, 23 of which were seated on the right side of the hall and 22 of which were seated on the left side. (File:Frey Assassination right side.png, File:Frey Assassination left side.png)


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