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Meera Reed é a criança mais velha de Howland Reed. Seu irmão mais novo é Jojen Reed. Ela possui dezesseis anos. [1]

Aparência e personalidade

Como uma típica cranogmana, Meera é magra e pequena. Ela possui cabelos longos e castanhos, e olhos verdes. [2] Embora não possua grandes seios, e não ser lembrada como uma mulher bonita, Theon Greyjoy parece ter considerado-a atrativa, [3] enquanto a pequena caída que Bran Stark tinha por ela cresce ao ponto de ele acreditar "amar" ela em A Dança dos Dragões. [4]

Meera foi ensinada a lutar com uma rede e um tridente por seu pai. Ela é uma ótima caçadora, capaz de pegar um peixe facilmente com a sua lança. Ela conseguiu derrotar Verão em combate, usando sua rede para prender e imobilizar o lobo gigante. [5]

Meera é descrita como tendo uma disposição animada, ao contrário do seu irmão mal-humorado. Ela é extremamente leal e protetora de seu "príncipe", assim como de seu irmão, e não foge de uma luta caso haja a possibilidade. Bran diz que a única coisa que a irrita ou chateia é seu irmão Jojen. [1]

Eventos recentes

A Fúria dos Reis

In the middle of a Harvest Feast, Meera and her brother Jojen Reed arrive to pledge Reeds support to Winterfell and Robb after Eddard Stark's death. Meistre Luwin tells Bran that he should greet these two warmly because Howland Reed was a great friend of his father and these are his children. Meera is with Jojen when Jojen asks about the lobos gigantes, wanting to see them, and is told they are in the Bosque sagrado. [2]

Later, Meera manages to defeat the direwolf Verão using a net and frog spear. Bran claims that Verão won, but then Jojen points out that Verão is tangled up in the net and cannot escape. After Bran does a mock fight with Verão, he asks her if she was taught to fight by their Mestre de Armas, and she tells him that Atalaia da Água Cinzenta has no knights, master at arms, maester, or ravens. She says neither ravens nor the Reeds’ enemies can find Atalaia da Água Cinzenta because it moves, although many have tried. [5]

Bran asks her if he can visit Atalaia da Água Cinzenta after the conflict, and she tells him that he can come whenever he wants. [5]

Jojen tells Bran that everyone in the castle hears him scream when he sleeps, and asks about what frightens him. As Jojen questions Bran and pushes him to admit he has sonhos de lobo, Bran gets agitated, which causes Verão to get agitated, and start to act aggressively towards Jojen. Meera tells her brother to climb the tree, but he initially refuses, telling her it is not yet his time to die. Cão Felpudo joins Verão and they both start to attack. Jojen finally climbs the tree, Meera following him. They climb down only after Hodor arrives to chase the direwolves away at Bran’s instruction. [5]

Later, Meera is behind Jojen when they enter Bran’s room after he is left there by Osha who had told Bran that she has seen many of the mythical beasts of the Norte, but not a corvo de três olhos. Bran finally tells Meera and Jojen about his sonhos de lobo. Then Jojen reveals one of his own dreams: he saw that sea would come to Winterfell.

When Bran tells them that Meistre Luwin thinks that it should be possible to change the dreams, Meera agrees. She gets angry with her brother when he tells them that what he sees always comes true. Jojen reveals that he has seen the bodies of Bran and Rickon at the feet of the man they call Fedor (not revealed as actually the Ramsay Snow yet) and he is skinning off their faces with a knife. Meera states that she could go down to the dungeons and kill Fedor now, but Jojen tells her she will not succeed; the jailers would stop her, he says, and would not believe her if she tried to explain. [6]

When Theon Greyjoy takes Winterfell, Bran is carried out of his room where he meets Meera and Jojen, who have also been taken captive. [7]

Later, Bran, Meera, Jojen, Rickon, Osha and Hodor fake an escape from Winterfell, returning to hide in the crypts until after the castle is sacked by Ramsay Snow. Debris traps them in the crypts until Hodor forces the door open with his massive strength. Outside they find the castle destroyed. Many of the bodies they find are of the people Jojen saw dead in his dream. Meera takes the sword of Rickard Stark from the crypts to use as a weapon.

In the bosque sagrado, they find Meistre Luwin alive but unconscious. They wake him and he warns them of all the enemies Bran and Rickon have in each direction. Luwin advises Osha to split the Stark children up to make them harder to find. Osha decides to take Rickon with her and Jojen says that he and Meera will take Bran. After they separate, Jojen tells the others that their road is norte. [8]

A Tormenta de Espadas

Meera has been hunting for the group as they move north and is their main food provider, mainly catching fish and frogs.

They camp in a place they call Torre Arruinada, but Jojen tells them that they need to move on. Meera questions him on why they should leave since Torre Arruinada is a safe place and there is plenty of food, but Jojen tells her that though Bran could wait out the in anonymity there, it was not the place they needed to be. He says they must keep going to find Bran's tutor in the norte. Meera eventually agrees with Jojen, but gives the choice to Bran, saying he is their prince and they will do what he tells them to do. Bran finally decides to go norte. [1]

As they move north, they are fed with the fish Meera spears and the squirrels and hares Verão finds. Bran often watches as Meera spears fish, admiring her speed and precision. As they travel on, food becomes harder to find, even for Summer. Jojen insists that they keep away from roads because there will encounter travelers who will spread tales about a giant, a cripple boy and a wolf.

When the weather turns bad, Verão finds them a cave where they find a mountain man (Bran thinks he is a Liddle) who shares his food with them. When they ask if they should take the Estrada do Rei, the mountain man tells them that it's dangerous for travelers. Now there are flayed men and dead men. He tells them that o Urso disappeared north of the Muralha with most of his men and that his Patrulha da Noite had returned with no messages. He says things were different when there was a Stark in Winterfell. Jojen tells him that the wolves will return. In the morning the man is gone, but he left some food for them. [9]

When Jojen tells Bran that Hodor likes it when somebody says his name, Bran tells them that that his real name is Walder and he is Velha Ama distant progeny. He asks if they think the homens de ferro killed ela. Meera states that it was not Theon Greyjoy who did the killing because too many of the dead were nascidos do ferro. Meera tells him to remember Velha Ama’s stories so part dela would be alive in him.

As they move on, Bran tells the Reeds that both he and Hodor like stories about knights. Meera then proceeds to tell a story about the Cavaleiro da Árvore que Ri no Ano da Falsa Primavera. It starts out when a young cranogmano who knew many magics of his people (likely Howland Reed, Meera's father) traveled to visit the Ilha das Caras and stayed there for a winter. In the year of the false spring, he leaves and comes upon um grande castelo where um grande torneio is taking place. He runs into three squires who start a fight with him. A two-legged loba rescued the cranogmano, attacking the squires and running them off with a tourney sword. She then takes him back to her lair. She insists the lad attend the tourney feast as he has a rightful place at the table. At the feast, he sees the squires with their knights. He is offered the chance to take the squires on in the joust, but the little cranogmano declines, since eles are not trained for jousting and he would most likely lose. Late on the second day, however, a short mystery knight in ill-fitting armor appears and defeats the squires served - o cavaleiro forquilha, o cavaleiro porco-espinho, e o cavaleiro das duas torres. To ransom their horses and armor, the mystery knight, in a booming voice, only requires the knights to teach their squires honor. The knight then disappeared from the lists, leading the king to send his own son, príncipe-dragão, to search for the Cavaleiro da Árvore que Ri. The next day, all that was found of the mystery knight was the knight's shield painted with a heart tree with a laughing red face. Meera concludes the story by saying o príncipe-dragão went on to win the tourney. [9]

Bran complains about the story, saying the Cavaleiro da Árvore que Ri should have won the whole tourney and the donzela-lobo should have been crowned as the Rainha do Amor e da Beleza. Meera says she was, but that that was a sadder story. [9] Throughout the telling, Jojen repeatedly asks Bran if he's sure he hasn't heard this story before from his father.

They arrive at a village in disrepair: the most substantial building, the inn, only has a few walls still standing. Bran tells the Reeds that this is part of Nova Dádiva given to the Patrulha da Noite courtesy of Rainha Alysanne. The area had been abandoned because of raiding by the selvagens. With the Patrulha not being as strong, the villages could not be protected, and the smallfolk moved south.

Jojen tells them they have to find shelter since a storm is coming. There is a holdfast, Coroadarrainha in the middle of the lake, but Meera notes that they have no boat. Bran tells them that Velha Ama said there's a stone causeway hidden under the water, and Meera easily finds the beginning of it once she knows it's there.

Meera leads them across the zigging and zagging causeway. The water comes only up to Hodor’s waist and the Reed’s chests, and is slippery, making the journey treacherous. The door to the holdfast cannot be completely closed, but Meera is able to open it all the way. Stairs lead up and down, but are closed off by rusted iron grates which can not be forced. Bran is able from Hodor’s back to reach up and pull out a rusted grate above them covering a murder hole. They climb up through the murder hole to the safety of group of small cells on the second level.

Bran asks Jojen how they will get past the wall, but Jojen is not sure, only that one of the castles along the wall may give them a way through. He tells them they cannot go to the occupied castles - the Patrulha da Noite may not let them pass. Bran says that his uncle said that the gates through the wall were sealed when they were abandoned. Meera says they could open them, but Bran worries about letting bad things back through.

It is then that Jojen sees a man on a horse in the village as a storm arrives. The thunder scares Hodor who starts screaming his name in fear. Bran is able to quiet him so they don't give away their position. Immediately after this, Jojen spies many more men in the village, one of whom turns out to be Jon Snow, traveling with selvagens. Hodor starts screaming again in agony, but nobody can control him. Bran reaches for Hodor as he had for Summer for just a second and Hodor sags to the floor, almost comatose. [10] Bran posses Verão and attacks the wildlings going after Jon. Verão kills three of them, but takes an arrow to the shoulder.

The group waited until the next day to leave after the selvagens were gone. Verão, who had slunk off to nurse his wounds, finally returns, and Meera removes the arrow and treats the wound.

They arrive at the Fortenoite, the castle in Jojen’s green dream, but they cannot figure out how to get across the wall. Bran tells Jojen that they should have gone to Castelo Negro, but Jojen tells him they dare not.

Meera climbs to the top of the Muralha to get a look at the other side while the boys search the buildings. They decide to sleep that night in the kitchen because it would provide some protection. The kitchen has a central well with steps inside leading down. Jojen states that maybe he would have a sonho verde to show them the way.

Bran, who cannot get to sleep, hears sounds coming from the well that are getting louder, like footsteps. Bran wiggles over to Meera and wakes her. She hears the sound at once, arms herself, then goes to the well. Bran cannot let Meera handle the threat alone, so forces his way into Hodor. As Hodor, Bran grabs a sword. When the thing finally comes over the edge of the well, Bran, in fear, loses connection with Hodor, who starts screaming. Meera traps the thing in her net and sticks him with her frog spear.

When the fire is stoked up they see a girl, Goiva, with a baby and a fat man in the black of the Patrulha trapped in the net. It is Samwell Tarly.

Goiva asks if Jojen is the one that Mãos-Frias was looking for. Mãos-Frias had told Goiva and Sam that there would be people in the castle. When Jojen asks how Sam and his group got through the wall, and Sam told him that they came through o Portão Negro, a passage as old as the wall. Sam will have to take them back because only a man sworn to the Patrulha da Noite can open the gate.

Sam tells them that Mãos-Frias was dressed in the black of the Patrulha, but pale. He rides an elk and has ravens. Mãos-Frias did not come because he cannot pass beyond the wall because there are spells woven into it. When Sam sees that Bran is crippled, he recognizes him as Jon’s brother. When Verão licks Sam’s hand, Bran decides they will go with him. Meera, Jojen, Hodor and Bran go through the Portão Negro, which is a white represeiro with a withered face. The door opened its eyes and asked, “Quem é?” Sam answers with the Patrulha da Noite oath and the door allows them to pass beyond the Muralha. [11]

A Dança dos Dragões

While traveling with Mãos-Frias north of the Muralha, Meera, Bran, Jojen and Hodor are forced to take shelter in an abandoned selvagem village while Mãos-Frias deals with a threat. The group discusses the nature of Mãos-Frias, deciding that he is not alive. Meera does not trust him. [12]

They reach the cave of the corvo de três olhos, but are ambushed by criaturas just outside the cave’s entrance. Because Jojen is too weak to continue, Meera carries him on her back up to the entrance. Inside the cave, the group meet the remaining Filhos da Floresta and o corvo de três olhos. [4] Jojen falls into a resigned depression, and Meera struggles to keep both their spirits up. [13]

Referências