Read The Hero and the Crown Online
Authors: Robin McKinley
side of the fire, with Gonturan’s hilt in easy reach. She lay down with her back to
the fire, and stared wide-eyed at the writhe of tree root before her.
Nothing happened.
The silence was broken only by the small snaps of the fire, and even these, at
last, subsided, and real darkness fell. I should keep the fire going. Aerin thought;
who knows what else is out there waiting? Who knows ... But her nightmares
claimed her, and she fell asleep; and again she was suspended in nowhere, but
nowhere was lit with a smoky red light, and a voice was calling her name; or she
thought it was her name it called, but perhaps the word was “uncle.”
She awoke at dawn with a cramp in her side, for a heavy black-furred head was
resting in the hollow between her last rib and her pelvis. As she stirred he began
to purr. She sat up anyway, and glared at him. “You are horrible,” she said, and he
gave her the same sleepy smile as when he had attempted to usurp her bedding.
Talat was dozing uneasily, still leaning against his tree, and was inclined to be
cross when she went to put his saddle on; but perhaps that was because of the
four-footed grey-edged shadow she brought with her. She rode off without
looking behind her; but she felt, if she could not hear, the fluid motion following,
and the black cat trotted along beside them as he could, occasionally leaping into
the rocks above them as the trail narrowed. Once he jumped over them, from a
rock face on one hand to an evergreen tree on the other, showering them with
small sharp needles and seedpods; and when he rejoined them Talat whirled and
snapped at him, but he only glided out of the way. He was smiling again. “Don’t
let him tease you,” Aerin murmured. Talat’s ears stayed back all that day, and he
was a little short on the weak leg, for he could not relax.
On the next day the yerigs joined them, the shaggy wild dogs with their great
ruffs and silky feathery legs and long curling tails. They were a little less alarming
than the folstza only because Aerin was accustomed to the king’s hounds, which
were only half the size of the yerigs. The royal barn cats who caught the mice that
tried to invade the grain bins were barely a tenth the size of the folstza.
On the next day the yerigs joined them, the shaggy wild dogs with their great
ruffs and silky feathery legs and long curling tails. They were a little less alarming
than the folstza only because Aerin was accustomed to the king’s hounds, which
were only half the size of the yerigs. The royal barn cats who caught the mice that
tried to invade the grain bins were barely a tenth the size of the folstza.
Still they traveled north and east, and still the sun rose before them and sank
behind them, but it seemed to Aerin, leading her quiet army, that it rose more
sluggishly and sank sooner each day; and while the trees still shook out young
leaves for her, there were fewer trees, and the solitary sound of Talat’s shod
hoofs rang duller and duller. Occasionally she thought wistfully of the Lake of
Dreams, and of a grey stone hall that stood near it; but she struck these thoughts
from her mind as soon as she recognized them.
And then the day came when dawn was barely a lessening of shadow, and the
clouds hung so low it took an effort of will to stand up straight and not bow
beneath their weight. “Soon,” Aerin said to those that followed her; and soon
came back to her in a rumble of many throats.
Talat stepped out that morning as if all his joints ached, and Aerin was willing
enough to go slowly; she heard little gibbering voices snarling and sniveling at the
edges of her mind, and there seemed to be a red fog over her eyes, as if the
nothingness that haunted her nights would find her out in the days; and she
murmured a word that Luthe had taught her, and the voices stopped, and the fog
lifted. But she was not long allowed the pleasure of this small victory, for now a
single voice murmured to her, and its murmurs reminded her of her Northern
blood, her demon blood... “No!” she cried, and bent forward to press her face in
Talat’s mane, and then she felt the pressure of a heavy paw on her shoulder, and
whiskers tickled her cheek, and she opened her eyes to see two yellow eyes in a
black face that did not smile; and Talat stood perfectly still, his head bowed, as
the black cat’s other forepaw pressed into his crest.
She sat up again, and the cat dropped to the ground, and Talat turned his head
to look at the cat, and the cat turned his head to look back. Talat’s ears, half back,
eased a little, and one reluctantly came forward and pointed toward the cat, and
the cat walked up to him and put up his nose. Talat’s other ear came forward and
pricked, and he lowered his nose, and the two breathed gently into each other’s
faces. Then they went on.
The mountains opened suddenly into an ugly uneven plain; the footing was
bad, crumbly and full of small hidden crevasses, and there were no trees at all.
Aerin’s army stepped and glided and shambled out of the shadows of the rocks
and the last leaves, and billowed up around her till she and Talat were the hub of
a wheel; and all looked around them. “We are no longer in Damar,” she said
calmly, and Talat heaved a great sigh. Aerin unslung Gonturan from her saddle,
and carried the blade in her hand, for the comfort of her only, for there was
nothing for a sword to do in the wide bleak brooding space before them, where
no spring could come.
The silence hammered at her, and she heard the little gibbering voices again,
but indifferently this time, as if she heard them from behind a locked door whose
strength she did not doubt. “Come along, then,” she said, and Talat walked
forward, yerig and folstza making way for them and then falling in beside them.
There was nothing to see but the heavy grey sky and the bleak grey landscape.
Mountains again there must be on the far side of this flat grey space; but the
clouds ringed them in, and there was no horizon. Her beasts followed her because
she led them, but they could not see what she led them to.
Neither could she see aught that was useful; but the small nasty voices in her
mind seemed to push harder on one side of her skull than another; and so she
went toward them.
And before them suddenly was a black mountain, or crag, or tower, or all three;
for it was the size of a mountain, but of the looming impossible shape of a crag
that will be ripped into an avalanche in the next great storm; and yet it was also a
worked shape, however improbable, as if a hand had built it—surely in its peak
was the glint of windows?—but the hand must have belonged to a madman.
Around it twined a vast vine of the surka, and Aerin’s stomach turned over and
fell back in her belly like a stone, and the gibbering voices could be heard to
laugh.
She bent and picked up her sword; but the blue fire had gone out, and the
blade was as dull as the grey plain around them. She looked again to the glint that
might be windows, for she knew now that she had come to the place she looked
for, knew that Agsded was here. And she knew also that there was no way in, for
the way that Gonturan might have won her was lost to her now.
Slowly she circled the great tower, but there were no doors, and now it looked
like a mountain after all, and nothing that should have had a door, it was foolish
to have supposed otherwise; and her quest was a failure, for if not here then she
knew not where. She crawled over the rocks below the surka that wrapped itself
around the black crag, for she would not touch the surka if she could help it, this
surka that the eye of Agsded must have touched, that his breath might have
stirred; but she went alone, for Talat and the folstza and yerig waited where she
had challenged the tower with Gonturan’s flame and then lost it.
She came round the full circle and knew herself defeated, and she went up to
Talat and put her arms around his neck and her face in his mane, as she had done
so often before for little hurts and dismays; and now in this great hurt she had no
other recourse. He tucked his chin against her arm, but it was no comfort, and she
stepped away from him again—and he bolted forward, and reared, and neighed,
a war-horse going to battle. She stared at him open-mouthed, the hilt of her dull
sword prodding her elbow.
Talat scrambled up the rocks before them, and neighed again; and plunged into
the twining surka, which slowed him little. Aerin watching felt that the leaves
pulled at him and hindered his passage as best they might; but he surged through
them and did not care. He neighed again as he reached the foot of the smoother
walls of the tower itself; he was above the vines now, and Aerin could see streaks
of their sap on him. He shook his head, and reared again, and struck the walls
with his front feet; and sparks flew, and there was a smell as of burning, but of
the burning of unclean things. He came to all fours, and then reared and struck
again; and then the folstza and the yerig were flowing up over the rocks and
through the clinging surka to join him, and the yerig queen flung herself at a high
outthrust knob of rock, and scrabbled at it.
“It won’t work,” Aerin whispered, and Talat reared and struck again, and the
smell of burning was stronger.
The folstza were clawing great ropes of vine from the base of the tower, and
flinging them down, and the tower seemed to quiver in her sight. The sharp little
elbow of rock that the yerig queen clung to gave way suddenly, dumping her at
Talat’s feet; but where it had been there was a crack in the black wall; and when
Talat struck at the crack a fine rain of stone powder pattered down.
The torn vines thrashed like wild things when they touched the sandy grey
ground. Aerin reached to touch one of the dark leaves, and it turned into a small
banded snake with venomous eyes; but she picked it up anyway, and it was only a
leaf. She stood staring as her army sought better purchase on the black rock face;
distantly she heard the patter of stone chips, and she picked up another leaf, and
wove it through the stem of the first; and another, and then another, and when,
suddenly, there was a crash and a roar and she looked up, what she held in her
hands was a thick heavy green wreath of surka; and her hands were sticky with
the sap.
A great face of the crag had fallen, and within, Aerin saw stairs winding up into
the black mountain, red with torchlight; and her army turned its eyes on her, and
panted, and many of their mouths dripped pink foam, and many of their feet had
torn and bleeding pads. Talat was grey with sweat. With the wreath in her hands,
and Gonturan banging lifelessly at her side, she stepped carefully through the
rubble, and through the ranks of her army, many of whom touched her lightly
with their noses as she passed them, and set her foot on the first stair.
A great face of the crag had fallen, and within, Aerin saw stairs winding up into
the black mountain, red with torchlight; and her army turned its eyes on her, and
panted, and many of their mouths dripped pink foam, and many of their feet had
torn and bleeding pads. Talat was grey with sweat. With the wreath in her hands,
and Gonturan banging lifelessly at her side, she stepped carefully through the
rubble, and through the ranks of her army, many of whom touched her lightly
with their noses as she passed them, and set her foot on the first stair.
THE STAIRS WENT UP and up in a long slow spiral, and Aerin followed, turning
round and round till it seemed to her she must be climbing the well of the sky and
at the end of the staircase she would step onto the moon’s cold surface and look
down, far away, upon the green earth. For a little while she could hear her
friends, who waited restlessly at the foot of the stair; once she heard the thinnest
thread of a whine, but that was all. None tried to follow her. Then she could no
longer hear anything but the soft sound of her footsteps and the occasional slow
stutter of a guttering flame. Her legs ached with climbing, and her back ached
with tension, and her neck ached with keeping her head tipped up to look at the
endless staircase; and her mind ached with thoughts she dared not think. Daylight
had disappeared long since, had gone with the last sounds of her beasts; the light
in her eyes was red. In the edges of her vision she saw gaping black doors that led
into chambers she would not imagine, let alone turn her gaze to see; and
sometimes the soft noise of her footsteps echoed strangely on a stair that opened
into such a room.
The silence weighed her down; the air grew heavier with every step up. She
recognized the weight, though she had never felt it thus before: evil. Maur’s
breath had stunk of evil, and its words had set evil tracks in her mind; but she had
faced Maur on the earth and under the sky, not in a dark endless airless tower.
She struggled on. With each step she felt her ankles and shinbones jar against the
floor, and tendons grate across her kneecaps, the heavy thigh muscles twist and
curl, her hips grind in their sockets. Her right ankle began to ache.