Read The Hero and the Crown Online
Authors: Robin McKinley
go to the kitchens if you don’t wish to.”
Aerin laughed. “You know me too well. After sulking, I sneak off to the stables
after dark—preferably after bedtime—and talk to my horse.”
Teka smiled and sat down on the red-and-blue embroidered cushion (her
embroidery, not Aerin’s) on the chair by Aerin’s bed. “I have had much of the
raising of you, these long years.”
“Very long years,” agreed Aerin, reaching for a leg of turpi. “Tell me about my
mother.”
Teka considered. “She came walking into the City one day. She apparently
owned nothing but the long pale gown she wore; but she was kind, and good with
animals, and people liked her.”
“Until the king married her.”
Teka picked up a slab of dark bread and broke it in half. “Some of them liked
her even then.”
“Did you?”
“King Arlbeth would never have chosen me to nurse her daughter else.”
“Am I so like her as folk say?”
Teka stared at her, but Aerin felt it was her mother Teka looked at. “You are
much like what your mother might have been had she been well and strong and
without hurt. She was no beauty, but she ... caught the eye. You do too.”
Tor’s eye, thought Aerin, for which Galanna hates me even more
enthusiastically than she would anyway. She is too stupid to recognize the
difference between that sort of love and the love of a friend who depends on the
particular friendship—or a farmer’s son’s love for his pet chicken. I wonder if
Perlith hates me because his wife hoped to marry Tor, or merely for small
scuttling reasons of his own. “That’s just the silly orange hair.”
“Not orange. Flame-colored.”
“Fire is orange.”
“You are hopeless.”
Aerin grinned in spite of a large mouthful of bread. “Yes. And besides, it is
better to be hopeless, because—” The grin died.
“And they all have husbands, and go only by special dispensation from the
king, and only if they can dance as well as they can ride. And none at all has
ridden at the king’s side since Aerinha, goddess of honor and of flame, first taught
men to forge their blades,” Aerin said fiercely. “You’d think Aerinha would have
had better sense. If we were still using slingshots and magic songs, I suppose we’d
still all be riding with them. They needed the women’s voices for the songs to
work—”
“That’s only a pretty legend,” said Teka firmly. “If the singing worked, we’d still
be using it.”
“Why? Maybe it got lost with the Crown. They might at least have named me
Cupka or Marli or—or Galanna or something. Something to give me fair warning.”
“They named you for your mother.”
“Then she has to have been Damarian,” Aerin said. This was also an old
argument. “Aerinha was Damarian.”
“Aerinha is Damarian,” said Teka, “and Aerinha is a goddess. No one knows
where she first came from.”
There was a silence. Aerin stopped chewing. Then she remembered she was
eating, swallowed, and took another bite of bread and turpi. “No, I don’t suppose
I ever thought the king would let his only, and she somewhat substandard,
daughter ride into possible battle, even though sword-handling is about the only
thing she’s ever gotten remotely good at—her dancing is definitely not
satisfactory.” She grunted. “Tor’s a good teacher. He taught me as patiently as if it
were normal for a king’s child to have to learn every sword stroke by rote, to have
to practice every maneuver till the muscles themselves know it, for there is
nothing that wakes in this king’s child’s Wood to direct it.” Aerin looked, hot-
eyed, at Teka, remembering again Perlith’s words as he left the hall last night.
“Teka, dragons aren’t that easy to kill.”
“I would not want to have to kill one,” Teka said sincerely. Teka, maid and
nurse, maker of possets and sewer of patches, scolder and comforter and friend,
who saw nothing handsome in a well-balanced sword and who always wore long
full skirts and aprons.
Aerin burst out laughing. “No, I am not surprised.”
Teka smiled comfortably.
Aerin ate several of the mik-bars herself before dusk fell and she could slip
privately out of the castle by the narrow back staircase that no one else used, and
into the largest of the royal barns where the horses of the first circle were kept.
She liked to pretend that the ever observant men and women of the horse, the
sofor, did not notice her every time she crept in at some odd hour to visit Talat.
Anyone else of the royal blood could be sure of not being seen, had they wished
to be unseen; Aerin could only tiptoe through the shadows, when there were
shadows, and keep her voice down; and yet she knew she was simply recognized
and permitted to pass. The sofor accepted that when she came thus quietly she
wished to be left alone, and they respected her wishes; and Hornmar, the king’s
own groom, was her friend. All the sofor knew what she had done for Talat, so the
fact that they were being kind by ignoring her hurt her less than similar
adaptations to the first sol’s deficiencies did elsewhere in the royal court.
Talat had been wondering what had become of her for almost two days, and
she had to feed him the last three milk-bars before he forgave her; and then he
snuffled her all over, partly to make sure she was not hiding anything else he
might eat, partly to make sure she had in fact returned to him. He rubbed his
cheek mournfully along her sleeve and rolled a reproachful eye.
Talat was nearly as old as she was; he had been her father’s horse when she
was small. She remembered the dark grey horse with the shining black dapples on
his shoulders and flanks, and the hot dark eye. The king’s trappings had looked
particularly well on him: red reins and cheek pieces, a red skirt to the saddle, and
a wide red breastplate with a gold leaf embroidered on it; the surka leaf, the
king’s emblem, for only one of the royal blood could touch the leaves of the surka
plant and not die of its sap.
He was almost white now. All that remained of his youth were a few black hairs
in his mane and tail, and the black tips of his ears.
“You have not been neglected; don’t even try to make me think so. You are fed
and watered and let out to roll in the dirt every day whether I come or not.” She
ran a hand down his back; one of Hornmar1 s minions had of course groomed him
to a high gloss, but Talat liked to be fussed over, so she fetched brushes and
groomed him again while he stretched his neck and made terrible faces of
enjoyment. Aerin relaxed as she worked, and the memory of the scene in the hall
faded, and the mood that had held for the last two days lightened and began to
break up, like clouds before a wind.
THE YOUNG AERIN had worshipped Talat, her father’s fierce war-stallion, with
his fine lofty head and high tail. She thought it very impressive that he would rear
and strike at anyone but Hornmar or her father, rear with his ears flat back, so
that his long wedge-shaped head looked like a striking snake’s.
But when she was twelve years old her father had gone off to a Border battle: a
little mob of Northerners had slipped across the mountains and set fire to a
Damarian village. Something of the sort happened not infrequently, and in those
days Arlbeth or his brother Thomar attended to such occurrences, riding out
hopefully and in haste to chop up a few Northerners who had stayed to loot
instead of scrambling back across the Border again at once. The Northerners
knew Damarian reprisals were invariably swift, and yet always there were a few
greedy ones who lingered. It was Arlbeth’s turn this time; and there had been
more Northerners than usual. Three men had been killed outright, and one horse;
two men injured—and Talat.
Talat had been slashed across the right flank by a Northern sword, but he had
carried Arlbeth safely through the battle till its end. Arlbeth was appalled when at
last he was free to dismount and attend to it; there were muscles and tendons
severed; the horse should have fallen when he took the blow. Arlbeth’s first
thought was to end it then; but he looked at his favorite horse’s face, with the lips
curled back from the teeth and the white showing around the eye: Talat was
daring his master to kill him, and his master couldn’t do it. Arlbeth thought, If he
is stubborn enough to walk home on three legs, I am stubborn enough to let him
try.
Aerin had been one of the first to run out of the City and meet the returning
company. They were slow coming home, for Talat had set the pace, and while
Aerin knew that if anything had happened to her father a messenger would have
been sent on ahead, still their slowness had worried her—and she felt an awful
fear squeeze her belly when she first saw Talat, his head hanging nearly to his
knees, put three legs slowly down one after the other, and hop for the fourth. She
only then saw her father walking on the horse’s far side.
Somehow Talat climbed the last hill to the castle, and crept into his own stall,
and with a terrible sigh, lay slowly down in the straw there, the first time he had
been off his feet since the sword struck him. “He’s made it this far,” said Arlbeth
grimly, and sent for the healers; but when they came to corner Talat in his stall,
he surged to his feet and threatened them, and when they tried to pour a narcotic
down his throat, it took four of the hafor and a chain twisted around his jaw to
hold him still.
They sewed the leg up, and it healed. But he was lame, and he would always be
lame. They turned him out into a pasture of his own, green with chest-high grass,
cool with trees, with a brook to drink from and a pond to soak in, mud at the edge
of the pond for rolling, and a nice big dry shed for rain; and Hornmar brought him
grain morning and evening, and talked to him.
But Talat only grew thin and began to lose his black dapples; his coat stared
and he didn’t eat his grain, and he turned his back on Hornmar, for Hornmar was
taking care of Arlbeth’s new war-horse now.
Arlbeth had hoped Talat might sire him foals; he would like nothing better than
to ride Talat again. But Talat’s bad leg was too weak; he could not mount the
mares, and so he savaged them, and turned on his handlers when they tried to
prevent him. Talat was sent back to his pasture in disgrace. Had he been any
horse but the king’s favorite, he would have been fed to the dogs.
It had been over two years since Arlbeth had led Talat home from his last
battle, and Aerin was fifteen when she ate some leaves from the surka. While
they had been trying to breed Talat, Aerin had been turning corners that weren’t
there and falling downstairs and being haunted by purple smoke billowing from
scarlet caves.
Galanna was not at all pleased by Aerin’s birth; not only was Aerin a first sol,
which Galanna would never be unless she managed to marry Tor, but her mother
died bearing her, which made Aerin altogether too interesting a figure within the
same household that Galanna wished to continue to revolve around herself.
Aerin was by nature the son of child who got into trouble first and thought
about it later if at all, and Galanna, in her way, was quite clever. Galanna it was
who dared her to eat a leaf of the surka; she dared her by saying that Aerin would
be afraid to touch the royal plant, because she was not really of royal blood: she
was a throwback to her mother’s witch breed, and Arlbeth was her father in name
only. If she touched the surka, she would die.
At fifteen Aerin should already have shown signs of her royal blood’s Gift;
usually the Gift began to make its presence known—most often in poltergeist
fits—years younger. Galanna had contrived to disguise her loathing for her littlest
cousin for several years after her temper tantrums upon Aerin’s birth had not
been a complete success; but lately had occurred to an older Galanna that if Aerin
really was a throw-back, a sport, as she began to appear truly to be, Galanna had
excellent reason to scorn and dislike her: her existence was a disgrace to the royal
honor.
They made a pair, facing off, standing alone in the royal garden, glaring at each
other. Galanna had come to her full growth and beauty by that time: her blue-
black hair hung past her hips in heavy waves, and was artfully held in place by a
golden web work of fine thread strung with pearls; her cheeks were flushed
becomingly with rage till they were as red as her lips, and her huge black eyes
were opened their widest. Her long eyelashes had almost grown back since the
night Aerin had drugged her supper wine and crept into her bedroom later and
cut them off. Everyone had known at once who had done it, and Aerin, who in
general held lying in contempt, had not bothered to deny it. She had said before
the gathered court—for Galanna, as usual, had insisted on a public prosecution—
that Galanna should have been grateful she hadn’t shaved her head for her; she’d
been snoring like a pig and wouldn’t have wakened if she’d been thrown out her
bedroom window. Whereupon Galanna had gone off in a fit of strong hysterics
and had to be carried from the hall (she’d been wearing a half-veil that covered