Read The Hero and the Crown Online
Authors: Robin McKinley
Teka frowned. “Redroot. That’s—um—astzoran. Red-root’s the old term for
it—they used to think it was good for some things.”
“What things?”
Teka glanced at her and Aerin bit her lip. “Why do you want to know?”
“I—oh—I read a lot in the old books in the library while I wasn’t ... feeling quite
well. There was some herb-lore, and they mentioned redroot.”
Teka considered, and some of her thoughts were similar to Tor’s when Aerin
had asked him to teach her swordplay. Teka had never thought about whether
Aerin’s fate had more to do with what Aerin was or what Damar was, or for
reasons beyond either; Teka merely observed that Aerin’s fate was unique. But
she knew, knew better even than the cousin who loved her, that Aerin would
never be a court lady; not like Galanna, who was a beautiful termagant, but
neither like Arlbeth’s first wife, Tatoria, whom everyone had loved. None of the
traditions of Arlbeth’s court could help the king’s daughter discover her fate; but
Teka, unlike Aerin herself, had faith that the destiny was somewhere to be found.
She hesitated, but she could remember nothing dangerous about the no longer
valued redroot.
“Astzoran doesn’t grow around here,” said Teka; “it is a low weedy plant that
prefers open meadows. It spreads by throwing out runners, and where the runner
touches the earth a long slender root strikes down. That is the redroot.” Teka
pretended great concentration upon her patch. “I might take a few days to ride
into the meadows beyond the City and into the Hills; I am reminded that there are
herbs I need, and I prefer to gather my own. If you wish to come, I will show you
some astzoran.”
The ointment recipe, Aerin found, was not as exact as it might be. She made
one mixture, spread some of it on one finger, and thrust the finger into a candle
flame—and snatched it out again with a yelp. Three more mixtures gained her
three more burnt fingers—and a terrific lecture from Teka, who was not, of
course, informed as to the details of why Aerin seemed intent on burning her
fingers off. After that she used bits of wood to smear her trial blends on; when
they smoked and charred, she knew she had not yet got it right.
After the first few tries she sighed and began to keep careful notes of how each
sample was made. It was not an exercise natural to her, and after she’d filled
several sheets of parchment with her tiny exact figures—parchment was
expensive stuff, even for kings’ daughters—she began to lose heart. She thought:
If this mess really worked, everyone would know of it; they would all use it for
dragon-hunting, and-would have been using it all along, and dragons would no
longer be a risk—and that book would be studied and not left to gather dust. It is
foolish to think I might have discovered something everyone before me had
overlooked. She bowed her head over her burnt twig, and several hot tears
slipped down her face onto her page of calculations.
ON HER EIGHTEENTH BIRTHDAY there was a banquet for the first sol, despite
all she could do to prevent it. Galanna shot her glances like poisoned arrows and
clung curiously near Tor’s side for someone else’s wife of so few seasons. Perlith
made witty remarks at Aerin’s expense in his soft light tenor that always sounded
kind, whatever he might be saying. The king her father toasted her, and the faces
around the tables in the great hall glittered with smiles; but Aerin looked at them
sadly and saw only the baring of teeth.
Tor watched her: she was wearing a golden tunic over a long red skirt; the tunic
had embroidered flowers wound round its hem, and petals of many colors
stitched drifting down the full sleeves; she wore the same two rings she had at
Galanna’s wedding. Her flame-colored hair was twisted around her head, and a
golden circlet was set upon it, and over her forehead three golden birds held
green stones in their beaks. He saw her wince away from the courtiers’ smiles,
and he shook Galanna’s hand from his arm impatiently, and then Galanna no
longer even pretended to smile.
Aerin did not notice this, for she never looked at Galanna if she could help it,
and if Galanna were near Tor she didn’t look at Tor either. But Arlbeth noticed. He
knew what it was that he saw, for better or for worse, and it was not often that
he did not know what was best done about the things he saw; but in this case he
did not know. What he read in Tor’s face tore at his heart, for it would be his
heart’s fondest wish that these two might wed, and yet he knew his people had
never loved the daughter of his second wife, and he feared their mistrust, and he
had reason to fear it. Aerin felt her father’s arm around her shoulders, and turned
to smile up at him.
After the banquet she went to sit in her window seat, staring into the dark
courtyard; the torches around its perimeter left great pools of shadow near the
castle walls. Her bedroom was dark as well, and Teka had not yet come to be sure
she had hung her good clothes up as she should instead of leaving them on the
floor where she would step on them. There was a light knock on the door. She
turned and said, “Come in,” with surprise; if she had thought about it, she would
have been silent and let the visitor leave without finding her. She wished to be
alone after the hall full of food and talk and bright smiles.
It was Tor. She could see him outlined in the light from the hall, and she had
been sitting in the dark long enough to see clearly. But he blinked and looked
around, for her figure was only a part of the heavy
“Why do you sit in the dark?”
“There was too much light in the hall tonight.”
Tor was silent. After a moment she sighed, and reached for a candle and flint. It
seemed to Tor that the shadows it cast upon her face made her briefly old: a
woman with grandchildren, for all her brilliant hair. Then she set the candle on a
small table and smiled at him, and she was eighteen again.
She saw that he carried something in his arms: a long narrow something,
wrapped in dark cloth. “I have brought you your birthday present—privately, as I
thought you might prefer.” And so that I need not do any explaining, he thought.
She knew at once what it was: a sword. She watched with rising excitement as
he unrolled the wrappings, and from them, gleaming, came her sword, her very
own sword. She reached for it eagerly, and slid it out of its scabbard. It was plain
but for some work on the hilt to make the grip sure; but she felt it light and true
and perfect in her hand, and her hand trembled with the pride of it.
“Thank you,” she said, her eyes still fixed on the sword, so she did not see the
look of hope and pity on Tor’s face as he watched her.
“At dawn you shall try it out,” said Tor, and the tone of his voice shook her out
of her reverie, and she raised her eyes to his. “I will meet you at our usual place,”
he said, and tried to speak as if this were a lesson like any other lesson; and if he
failed, Aerin still did not guess why he failed.
“This is ever so much better than another dressing gown,” she said lightly, and
was pleased to see him smile.
“It was a very beautiful dressing gown.”
“If it had been less beautiful, I would not have disliked it so much. You were as
bad as Teka, trying to keep me in bed, or trailing about my rooms in a dressing
gown forever.”
“And a lot of good it did us, despite the fact that you could not stand on your
feet without either fainting or falling over.”
“It was concentrating on my lessons with you that finally sweated the last of
the surka out of me,” Aerin said, waving her birthday present gently under his
nose.
“I almost believe you,” he replied sadly.
So they were standing, looking at each other, with the naked blade upheld
between them, when Teka come through the open door behind them. “Gholotat
protect us,” said Teka, and closed the door behind her.
“Is my birthday present not beautiful?” said Aerin, and turned the blade back
and forth quickly so that it winked at her old nurse as she stood by the door. Teka
looked at her face and then at Tor’s, and then back at Aerin’s, and said nothing.
“I will bid you good night,” said Tor, and because Teka was there he dared
reach out his hands to Aerin, and put them on her shoulders, as she slid her sword
into its scabbard, and kiss Her cheek as a cousin might; which he would not have
dared had they been alone. He bowed to Teka, and left them.
Perhaps it was having a real sword of one’s own. Perhaps it was being
eighteen—or that eighteen years’ practice of being stubborn was finally paying
off. If she still stumbled over the corners of rugs or bumped into doorways while
she was thinking about other things, she no longer bothered looking around
anxiously to find out if anyone had seen her: either they had or they hadn’t, and
she had other things on her mind; she reveled in those other things. They meant
that she did not blush automatically when she caught sight of Perlith, knowing
that he would have thought of something to say to her since the last time she had
failed to avoid him, and that his little half smile beneath half-lidded eyes would
make whatever he said worse. She walked through the halls of the castle and the
streets of the City the most direct way instead of the way she would meet the
fewest people; and she avoided the surka in the royal garden, but only that it
might not make her sick again. She did not cringe from the thought of its presence
or from the shame that she had to avoid it in the first place; nor did she any
longer feel that breathing the garden air was synonymous with breathing
Galanna’s malice.
She had discovered how to make the dragonfire ointment.
It was, she knew, sheer obstinacy that had kept her at it-over two years of
making fractional changes in her mixtures, learning how to find and prepare all
the ingredients for the mixtures, for she could not continue raiding Hornmar’s and
Teka’s supplies; finding small apothecary shops in the City that might sell the
odder ones, and riding out on the reluctant Kisha for the herbs that grew nearby.
It was, she knew, sheer obstinacy that had kept her at it-over two years of
making fractional changes in her mixtures, learning how to find and prepare all
the ingredients for the mixtures, for she could not continue raiding Hornmar’s and
Teka’s supplies; finding small apothecary shops in the City that might sell the
odder ones, and riding out on the reluctant Kisha for the herbs that grew nearby.
There were even those, especially among the older folk, who shook their heads
and said that they shouldn’t keep the young first sol mewed up in that castle the
way they did; it’d be better if she were let out to mingle with her people. If Aerin
could have heard, she would have laughed.
And the things she bought were such harmless things, even if some of them
were odd, and even though, as the months passed, she did buy quite a quantity of
them. Nothing there that could cause any ... mischief. Hornmar had mentioned,
very quietly, to one or two of his particular friends the first sol’s miraculous cure
of old Talat; and somehow that tale got around too, and as the witch woman’s
easy smile was remembered, so did some folk also begin to remember her way
with animals.
It was a few months before her nineteenth birthday that she put a bit of
yellowish grease on a fresh bit of dry wood, held it with iron pincers, and thrust it
into the small candle flame at the corner of her work table—and nothing
happened. She had been performing this particular set of motions—measuring,
noting down, mixing, applying and watching the wood burn-—for so long that her
movements were deft and exact with long practice even while her brain tended to
go off on its own and contemplate her next meeting of swords with Tor, or the
nagging Teka was sure to begin within the next day or two for her to darn her
stockings since they all had holes in them and lately she had perforce always to
wear boots when she attended the court in the great hall so that the holes
wouldn’t show. She was thinking that the green stockings probably had the
smallest and most mendable holes, and she had to have dinner in the hall tonight.
Since she’d turned eighteen she’d been expected to take part in the dancing
occasionally, and there was sure to be dancing tonight since the dinner was in
honor of Thorped and his son, who were here from the south; one of Thorped’s
daughters was one of Galanna’s ladies. It was difficult dancing in boots and she
needed all the help she could get. At this point she realized that her arm was
getting tired—and that the bit of yellow-slick wood was peacefully ignoring the
fire that burned around it, and that the iron tongs were getting hot in her hand.
She jumped, and knocked over the candlestick and dropped the hot tongs, and
the greasy bit of wood skittered over the dusty, woodchip-littered floor, picking
up shreds and shavings till it looked like a new sort of pomander. She had set up
shop in a deserted stone shed near Talat’s pasture that had once held kindling