Read The Hero and the Crown Online
Authors: Robin McKinley
was, after all, their Arlbeth’s daughter too, and Arlbeth they sincerely mourned,
and they read in her face that she mourned too. She stood at Tor’s side while
Arlbeth’s final bonfire burned up wildly as the incense and spices were thrown on
it, and the tears streamed down her face; and her tears did more good for her in
her people’s eyes than the Crown did, for few of them really understood about
the Crown. But she wept not only for Arlbeth, but for Tor and for herself, and for
their fatal ignorance; the wound that had killed the king had not been so serious a
one, had he had any strength left. Maur’s weight on the king of the country it
oppressed had been the heaviest, and the king had been old.
When Tor was proclaimed king in the long Damarian ceremony of sovereignty
officially bestowed, it was the first time in many generations that a Damarian king
wore a crown, the Hero’s Crown, for it had been tradition that the kings went
bare-headed in memory of that Crown that was the heart of Damar’s strength
and unity, and had been lost. After the ceremony the Crown was placed carefully
back in the treasure hall.
When Aerin and Tor had gone to look for it three days after they hurled Maur’s
skull out of the City, they had found it lying on the low vast pedestal where the
head had lain. They had looked at it, and at each other, and had left it there. It
was a small, flat, dull-grey object, and there was no reason to leave it on a low
platform, little more than knee high and wide enough for several horses to stand
on; but they did. And when the treasure keeper, a courtier with a very high
opinion of his own artistic integrity, tried to open the subject of a more suitable
keeping-place, Aerin protested before the words were all out of his mouth,
although they had been directed at Tor.
Tor simply forbade that the Crown be moved, and that was the end of it; and
the treasure keeper, offended, bowed low to each of them in turn, and left. He
might not have wished to be quite so polite to the witch woman’s daughter, for
the courtiers were inclined to take a more stringent view of such things than the
rest of Damar. But any lack of courtesy that survived the highborn Damarians’
knowledge that Aerin-sol had fought fiercely in the last battle against the
Northerners (although of course since she’d shown up only on the last day she’d
had more energy left to spend), and the inalterable fact that their new king was
planning to marry her, tended to back down in the face of the baleful glare of her
four-legged henchmen. Not that they ever did anything but glare. But the
treasure keeper’s visit had been watched with interest by nine quite large hairy
beasts disposed about Aerin’s feet and various corners of the audience chamber.
TOR HAD WANTED to marry her as part of the celebration of his kingship, and
have her acknowledged queen as he was acknowledged king, but Aerin insisted
they wait.
“One might almost think you didn’t want to be queen,” Tor said glumly.
“One might almost be right,” replied Aerin. “But it’s more that I don’t want
anybody to have the opportunity to say that I slipped in the back door. That I was
assuming everyone would be so preoccupied with you that no one would notice I
was being declared official queen by the way.”
“Mm,” said Tor.
“It was Arlbeth who told me that once royalty commits itself it can’t go back
into hiding,” Aerin said.
Tor nodded his head slowly. “Very well. But I think you’re doing your people an
injustice.”
“Ha,” said Aerin.
But Tor was right, although not for the reasons he would have preferred; it had
little to do with her fighting in the last battle, and almost nothing to do with the
Crown. By the time the three months’ betrothal that Aerin demanded was up and
the marriage was performed, thirteen weeks after what had come mysteriously to
be called Maur’s battle, most Damarians (all but a few hidebound courtiers)
seemed to have more or less forgotten that they had ever held the last king’s
daughter in so lively an antipathy; and affectionately they called her Fire-hair, and
Dragon-Killer. They even seemed to enjoy the prospect of Aerin as their new
queen; certainly the wedding was a livelier meeting than Tor’s crowning had
been, and the crowd cheered when Tor declared Aerin his queen, which startled
them both. But many things that had happened before the day Maur’s head had
been dragged into the City had faded from people’s memory, and at the wedding
they said comfortably to one another that it was true that the first sol’s mother
had been a commoner from some outlandish village in the North, and that Aerin-
sol had always been an odd sort of child; but she had grown into her rank quite
satisfactorily, and she had certainly helped turn the Northern tide with that funny
foreign sword of hers and those wild animals that were so fond of her (there are
worse spells than those that make wild animals tame).
Besides, while Tor had remained obstinately single, all the other sols of his
generation had gotten themselves married off; and Aerin was, whatever her
faults, a first sol.
And when Aerin understood at last what had happened, she laughed. So Maur
did me a good turn after all, she thought. That’s the finest victory of all.
It was called Maur’s battle perhaps because it had been fought on what was
now known as Maur’s plain. While much else had been forgotten, or at least
become a little blurry, of the events before the seasons the City had borne with
Maur’s head held in the king’s castle like an enormous jewel, everyone well
remembered that at the end of the battle the stretch of earth at the foot of the
king’s way was a destroyed forest, and that bodies of people and beasts, and of
half-beasts and half-people, lay everywhere, with broken bits of war gear mixed
with the broken landscape. And they remembered Maur’s skull rushing down on
them—flaming, they said, like a living dragon, its jaws open to spew fire—and
spinning past them in the darkness.
And in the morning, when they awoke, instead of low rolling hills despoiled by
war, they found a plain, flat as a table, stretching from the burnt-out fire where
the survivors had slept huddled together to the feet of Vasth and Kar and the pass
where Aerin had paused and seen what awaited her and gathered herself and her
army together. It was a desert plain, and it remained a desert; nothing grew
there, nor would grow, but a little low scrub. Desert creatures came to live there,
and a new sort of hunting dog was bred to run by sight, and the City dwellers
came to love the wild sweet song of the britti, the desert lark. They took to
holding horse races on the plain after the first few years of staring at it nervously
had worn off, and the uncanniness was lost in familiarity; and then various games
of skill were pursued there, mock battles and sword-play, and it became a much
better practice ground than the old cramped space behind the castle and the
royal stables at the peak of the City. It was a handy spot for the drilling of cavalry,
and Tor paid much attention to the rebuilding of his cavalry, for he, like his wife, if
perhaps no one else in the City, remembered very clearly what had happened in
the months preceding Maur’s battle. The Laprun trials therefore grew in size and
importance, which was all to the good; what was less good was the growing
popularity of the churakak, the duel of honor, fought by those a little too proud of
their ability to fight.
But spring did come, and people stirred themselves, and many of them felt
quite like their old selves, and went out to dig in the ground or refurbish their
shops or look to their stock and their holdings with good heart. Those who had
remained in the City over the winter, to nurse their wounds and regain their
strength, went home to their villages and began the long process of rebuilding,
and most of the rebuilding went on cheerfully. Tor and Aerin sent aid where they
could, and some of the new villages were handsomer (and better drained) than
the old ones had been.
It was during the first winter that Aerin, wandering vaguely one day in the
center-court garden of the castle, felt that there was something at the gate she
had entered by. She frowned at it till she remembered what it was: the great oil
green surka vine was gone. She stared round at all the gates to be sure she had
not mistaken it, but it was not there; and she went in search of Tor, and asked
what had happened to it.
Tor shook his head. “There isn’t any surka any more—anywhere. One day—a
fortnight, maybe, before Maur’s battle, they all went. I saw this one; the smoke
came from nowhere, but when it cleared, the surka was a charred skeleton. It was
such a weird sort of thing, and everyone was preoccupied with weird sorts of
things that always turned out to be unpleasant, that the remains were rooted out
and buried.
“Arlbeth said it was a sign too clear to be ignored, even if we didn’t know what
it meant, and so we carried no standard during the final days of the siege of the
City.” He frowned. “The surka seems to be something I want to remind people of;
we’re probably better off without it. No more Merths.” He smiled at her.
“And no more Aerins,” said Aerin feelingly.
Some who had lost too much stayed on in the City when spring came; Katah
had lost her husband, and she and her six children asked to stay on in the king’s
castle, where she had grown up. Tor and Aerin were glad to say yes, for the castle
was a little too empty; not only Perlith was gone, but Thurny and Gebeth and
Orin, and many others. And Aerin found the reliable and practical Katah
invaluable in sorting out which petitions and complaints to bend her royal
judgment on, and which to ignore. “I have found my calling,” said poor Katah,
who missed her husband: “I was meant to be a royal secretary.”
“You were meant to be the power behind the throne,” said Aerin. “I shall cover
you with a velvet drape and you can whisper to me what to tell the people as they
come.” Katah laughed, as she was supposed to.
Katah was not the only one that the passing of time did not heal. Galanna’s hair
had gone grey during that first winter, and was white by the time the second
spring after the battle came. She was quieter, and slower, and while she looked
with no love upon Damar’s new queen, she caused, and wished to cause, no more
trouble.
As Katah was a hard and honest worker, Aerin could contrive to steal a little
time to chase dragons—whose numbers had greatly fallen off since the
Northerners’ defeat—and to teach a suddenly considerable number of interested
young men and women what she knew about dragon-hunting. Among other
things, she found out what she had known all along, that she had a superior
horse. No horse liked wearing kenet, and most of them were much nastier about
it than Talat had ever been; and then there was the fact that Aerin had no idea
what to tell her students to do with their reins while they were trying to pin a
dragon with their spears. Somehow or other Aerin’s dragon-hunting lessons
began to spill into horsemanship lessons, and she taught her pupils first about
riding without stirrups, and later without reins. By trial and error she trained a
few young horses to go as Talat had gone for her—to prove to herself as much as
to anyone else that it could be done with other horses—and she learned to have
an eye for the horses who could learn what she wished to teach them, and those
who could not. Soon the queen of Damar was rumored to be an uncanny judge of
horseflesh, and her opinion on this colt or that mare was frequently sought.
Talat himself was as vain and cheerful as ever after a few weeks’ holiday, and
had as bottomless a hunger for mik-bars, but he was beginning to feel his age at
last, and Aerin or Hornmar had to chase him around with a stick to make him
exercise his weak leg on the days Aerin did not have time to ride. But the leg was
strong enough that when a few mares were cautiously introduced to him in his
pasture, desirable results were born eleven months later. His foals were all bright-
eyed and bouncy from their first breath, and Hornmar and Aerin were very careful
about who had the handling of them; and all of them grew up to go bridleless like
their sire, and many of them had his courage.
The royal kennels were expanded, and the yerig and folstza who chose to stay
near their lady were given their own quarters, although the door to the back
stairs that led to Aerin’s old rooms was always left open. It was observed, though
the thotor kennel-masters were at first too timid to do any crossbreeding
deliberately, that some of the royal bitches gave birth to taller and hairier puppies
than any official royal bloodlines could explain; and it was from these crosses that
the long-legged desert dogs eventually came. And after a few generations of
kittens grew up and had more kittens, the folstza began to accept more human
masters than Aerin, and to hunt on command, at least mostly. Even tamed cats
have minds of their own.
Having her own quarters did not stop the yerig queen, now Kala, from bearing