Read The Hero and the Crown Online
Authors: Robin McKinley
She was still carrying the surka wreath, and as she thought of Maur she
remembered the red stone she had taken with her from its ashes, and
remembered that she carried the stone even now. She had a moment’s cold
dread, wondering if she were carrying her own betrayal into Agsded’s lair; but she
put her hand into the breast of her tunic, and drew out the little soft pouch where
the stone lay. The stone was hot to the touch when she let it fall into her palm
from the pouch, and it seemed to writhe in her fingers; she almost dropped it, but
she thought of spiders and surka leaves, and held on; then shook it back into its
pouch, and curled her fingers around it._
Still she climbed, but she no longer felt alone. Evil was with her; red evil shone
in her eyes, rode on her shoulders, harried her heels; waited in the dark doorways
where she would not look, fell like ash and rose like smoke from the torches. Evil
was all around her, and it watched her, eyelessly, watched for her first stumble.
Still the stairs rose before her, and still her weary legs carried her up; she
wondered how many days she had spent climbing stairs, and if her army had
disbanded by now, and she worried about Talat, who was wearing his saddle and
gear. She should have remembered to strip it off before she entered the dark
tower.
The red light throbbed in time to her own pulse; she panted in a rhythm begun
by its fluctuations; the sweat that ran into her eyes was red, and it burned. And
now she had something else to worry about, for where she had touched the
tender skin of her throat with her surka-sticky fingers when she pulled at the
thong that held the dragon stone’s pouch, it burned too. But its throb had nothing
to do with the tower. It throbbed angrily and self-consciously, and her mind was
distracted enough to think, This is typical. On my way to gods know what
unspeakable doom, and I break out in a rash. But it lightened the evil a little; she
did not notice this as such, only that she toiled on in a slightly better spirit. Idly
she pulled one end of her collar loose and pressed it against the surka rash, which
didn’t help at all.
Up. And still up. Everything ached; it was impossible to tell the leg cramps from
the headache anymore; the only thing about her that still bore any individuality
was the surka rash on her chest, which was spreading. Up. She had been climbing
forever; she would be climbing forever. She would be a new god: the God That
Climbs. It was no more improbable than some of the other gods: the God That
Isn’t There, for example (more often known as the God That Follows or the God
That Goes Before), which was the shadow-god at midday. The rash had also
begun to itch, and she had to curl her surka-stained fingers into fists to stop
herself from scratching the too sensitive skin on her neck and chest. And still she
climbed. The heat in the red stone now beat at one hand even through the pouch;
and the crisp leaves of the surka pinched the fingers of the other hand.
She would have said she had no strength left for running, but she did run.
Gonturan banging painfully against her ankle, although her feet were numb with
climbing. Then she saw that the hall was quite short, for the blackness before her
was that of double doors, their frames edged with the thinnest line of red light;
and she stopped abruptly a few strides from them, her muscles quivering and her
knees threatening to dump her full length on the floor for the thing coming up the
stairs to find.
She leaned against the outer edge of one door, her back to the narrow wall
where it joined the corridor wall; her breath whined in her throat. Thank Luthe for
the thoroughness of my cure, she thought as she felt the thick air surging into the
bottom of her chest, being hurled out again, and a fresh lungful captured. The
rash on her chest throbbed with extra enthusiasm as she panted, and the skin
above her ribcage had to heave and subside more quickly. Well, thorough about
the important thing, she amended.
Luthe. She had not thought of him, had not quite said his name even in the
dimmest, most private recesses of her mind, since she had left him. She had said
she would come back to him. Her breathing eased; even the evil air seemed to
taste less foul. Luthe. She looked down the hallway, but saw nothing coming
toward her. Perhaps it is Nothing, she thought. Perhaps that is what follows here.
She looked down at her hands. She could not open the doors behind her—
supposing they opened in the usual fashion—with both hands full. She knelt
down, kicking the tip of Gonturan to one side so she jammed up into a corner and
gave Aerin’s armpit a sharp poke with her hilt, and put the hidden stone and the
green wreath on the stone floor. Slowly she upended the leather bag, and the hot
red stone spilled out, burning in its own light, long red tongues of that light
snaking down the corridor and up the walls. It made her dizzy. She prodded the
wreath and made a small hollow in the twined stems, hastily picked up the stone
as it tried to scorch her fingers, and dropped it in. It sizzled and hissed, but the
surka seemed to quench it, and the red light subsided. Aerin pulled the leaves
back over it again, shook the wreath to be sure it could not fall out, and stood up.
By the wings of the mother of all horses, her rash would drive her mad soon.
She rubbed it helplessly, the heel of her hand chafing it against the inside of her
shirt, and it responded gleefully by feeling as if it had caught fire; but as she
dropped her hand again and then tried to bow her shoulders so that her shirt and
tunic would fall away from the infected skin, she stopped thinking about what
might be creeping up the stairs behind her. Bowing her shoulders did no good
either. Irritably she turned to face the door, her free hand pressed flat against her
chest again with shirt and tunic between; and pushed at the doors with the hand
that held the surka. The leaves rasped against the inside edge of the doors, and
the doors exploded.
There was a roar like all the thunder gods came down off their mountain to
howl simultaneously in her ears; and winds spun around her like endless spiral
staircases, bruising her with their edges. There was torn redness before her eyes,
rent with blackness, clawed with white and yellow; she felt that her eyes would
be hammered out of their sockets. She staggered forward, still clutching the
wreath, the hand that held it outstretched. She could not see floor nor walls nor
ceiling, nor anything; only the shards of color, like mad rags of cloth streaming
past. Her other hand fell to Gonturan’s hilt, though she knew she hadn’t a chance
of drawing her in this vortex of storm; still it gave comfort to clutch at her.
The wind lifted her entirely off her feet for a moment and dropped her again
and she stumbled and almost fell, and so the wind seized her yet again and threw
her to one side, and only luck let her fall feet first the second time. This will not
do, she thought, and braced herself as best she could. I’ll probably lose her—and
with a wild heave she pulled Gonturan free of her scabbard.
And at the far end of the chamber stood a man dressed in white, with a red
sword girt at his side, and she knew him at once, for she had seen his face often
enough in her mirror.
She opened her mouth, but no words came out. He laughed, her own laugh,
but greater, deeper, with terrible echoes that made tangled harmonies, and those
harmonies found the places in her own mind that she had never looked into, that
by their existence had long frightened her; that she had hoped always to be able
to ignore. The air reeled over her in thick waves, and Gonturan’s blue fire dimmed
and flickered as her hand trembled.
“Well met, sister’s daughter,” he said. His voice was low and soft and
courteous; a thoughtful, philosophical, wise, and kindly voice, a voice anyone
might trust; a voice nothing like Aerin’s own.
“Not well met,” Aerin said at last in a strangled voice, which seemed to cut ugly
holes in the air currents between them, which destroyed the harmonies that still
hummed in her mind; but by the sound of her own voice she felt she had lost
something treasured and beautiful that might have forever been hers. “Not well
met. You killed my mother and you would kill my people and my country.”
He raised his shoulders, and his white robe rippled and fell in long graceful
folds that glinted softly, like the petals of spring flowers. His hazel eyes blinked
gently at her; her own eyes, but larger and set more deeply beneath a higher
brow. “And why, my dear, should you care? You never met your mother, so you
cannot miss her. I may have done you a favor; many daughters would be glad to
have escaped the tender ministrations of their mothers.
“And when has your land ever cared for you?” His voice sank lower yet,
purring, and he smiled Aerin’s own smile. “They call you witch’s daughter—and so
you are, and more, for your mother might have been given the mage mark had
she not fled too soon—and they should revere you for it. But in their small vicious
way they choose to revile you.
“Your father is kind—why should he not be? You have never been any
trouble—you have never demanded your rightful place as his daughter and his
only child; and lately you have been of some small use, slaying dragons, so that he
need not send out his valuable men on so inglorious a task. You have kept to the
shadows, and he has let you stay there, and has done nothing to deny his people’s
voices when they whisper, witch woman’s daughter.
“And Tor?” He chuckled. “Honest Tor. He loves you, you know. You know that.
So does everyone. They all say that you are your mother’s daughter—I think even
the worthy Arlbeth wonders just a little, sometimes—and your mother was a
witch; never forget that. Tor himself is, of course, not in a position to do much
thinking about this. And as you are your mother’s daughter, even when you do
not remember it...” He smiled her smile at her again, but it seemed very full of
teeth.
“No,” said Aerin; it was almost a shriek. Gonturan wavered in her hand.
“But yes. And think of who accompanied you to this fateful meeting. Do you
come with your father’s finest cavalry? Do you come at least with a troop of well-
meaning if inexperienced men? Why, no—you come without even the lowliest
Damarian foot soldier, without even a ragged village brat to shine your boots. You
come at all only because you escaped, like a prisoner, from the City which ought
to be yours to command. You come draggle-tailed, with wild beasts of the hills,
riding an old lame horse who should have been mercifully killed years ago.” He
seemed to have some trouble saying the word “mercifully”: it was as if his teeth
got in his way.
Aerin shook her head dumbly. His words buzzed in her ears like insects waiting
to sting her; and the terrible harmonies of his laugh bit deeper into her each time
she moved. If only her chest didn’t itch so; it was hard to concentrate on anything
through the itching; it was worse even than the headache. He was talking about
Talat, poor patient Talat, waiting for her while his saddle galled him; grey horses
often had oversensitive skin. If she had been born a horse she would undoubtedly
have been grey. Her chest felt like it no longer had skin on it at all; perhaps it was
being torn by those red-and-black creatures with the claws. The low murmuring
buzzing voice went on.
Do you think I like sending a child to a doom like this, one I know I cannot
myself face? It was as though she were hearing the words for the first time, so
loudly did they crash in her ears; Luthe’s voice was not mellifluous, like her red-
haired uncle’s; Luthe’s voice was raw and angry, like the spot on her chest.
“Luthe, and his games with children, for children’s games were as much as he
was capable—”
“Now that,” Aerin said quite clearly and calmly, “is nonsense. If you can do no
better than cheap insults, then the prophecy over-estimates you. I shall tell Luthe
that he could have met you himself.”
“The prophecy!” howled Agsded; and he seemed to grow till he towered over
her, his robes billowing, his hair red as fire; and dimly Aerin thought. His hair is
the color mine used to be before Maur burned most of it off. My hair isn’t that
color any more.
Agsded reached for his sword, and Aerin raised Gonturan again and shook her,
and blue fire ran down her edge and over Aerin’s hand and wrist, and onto the
floor; and where it touched, cracks appeared, and ran in tiny rays in all directions.
“You may be right about Tor and my father,” Aerin went on conversationally. “You
may even be right about me. But you are wrong about Luthe.”
The red sword whipped out of its scabbard and flew at her, but Gonturan
flashed to stop it, and where the blades crashed together more blue fire dripped
and splashed, and there was another series of small star-shaped cracks in the
floor.
“Fool,” boomed Agsded’s voice, and it was velvety no longer. “Fool. The
prophecy said that only one of my blood may face me, and so you have come this