The Crown of Dalemark
Far off among the mountains an indigo peak caught the sun and was for a moment yellow and green and purple.
Wend pointed a fist holding a piece of cheese. “City of gold!” He and Moril and Hestefan spoke almost in chorus. “Hern’s golden city.”
“Go on,” said Maewen. “It can’t be! Kernsburgh’s miles south of here.”
“It’s what we say, lady,” Wend explained, “when a peak catches the sun—to show we remember the city even though it’s long ruined and gone.”
“Ruined and gone!” Maewen said. “But—”
“It is, though,” Hestefan said reprovingly from the cart above her. “Did you not know?”
“I—” Maewen craned round at what she could see of the gray beard. What did Hestefan remind her of? She should have known about Kernsburgh. All the guides in the palace had never seemed tired of pointing out that Amil the Great had rebuilt the city. But none of them had thought to say that he had rebuilt it from nothing. “Ruins and rubble?” she asked.
“More like grass and humps in the ground by what I heard,” Mitt told her.
“Oh—bother!” Maewen said. “How am I supposed to find a crown in a place like that?”
“How indeed?” Navis murmured.
“A way will be found, lady,” Wend said.
Maewen supposed Wend knew. But as they mounted again and moved off, she could not help thinking that this mission was becoming more impossible with every mile they went. She wondered if Noreth had realized and simply run away. Maewen would not have blamed her. Six people set out wandering the old roads—one of those six accused of theft by a voice in the air, too!—in search of a crown buried in a city that did not exist anymore, with no provisions and almost no baggage, and this was supposed to prove that the wrong girl was Queen. As if the earls in their earldoms would let even Noreth get away with it! Maewen uneasily remembered that earls were like little kings in those days, bad kings in the South and better ones in the North, but all of them kings. And kings always made a point of keeping their thrones.
But Amil the Great did it somehow, she told herself. Don’t be too long turning up, Amil. I’ll hand over to you with the greatest pleasure.
The green road all this while was taking them through another gorge, overhung by more rowan trees. Maewen found she was nervously looking at the skyline, high above, in case an earl had sent a party of hearthmen to make sure they got no farther. It must be an earl who had kidnapped Noreth. One of her five companions was in the pay of an earl.
She felt a great deal better when the road took them out onto a green plain, high, high up. Chilly reviving wind swept over her. Far below, and yet seeming to stand up into the sky, was the gray sea, chopped by white galloping waves.
“This is better,” Mitt said, coming up beside her. “Maybe it’s being brought up a fisherman; I always like seeing the sea. Or maybe it comes of being a Holander. Eh, Navis?”
Navis had come up on the other side. He was looking out at the sea just as Mitt was—as if it was home, really. He said, “I miss the blue of the sea farther south, but I wasn’t displeased the Countess sent me to Adenmouth. Plenty of sea there. And I’ve never for one moment regretted leaving Holand.”
It was odd to hear Navis talk without sarcasm at all. Maewen wondered how to find out what they were both doing so far from Holand, but before she could think how, Navis said to her, “You, of course, will have a special interest in this stretch of sea.”
“Why? Do you know something I don’t know?” Maewen shot back. A silly thing to say, but Navis had that effect on her.
“I was meaning that we must be quite near Kredindale,” Navis said, “where I gather you were born, Noreth. Isn’t it your cousin Kintor who’s lord here?”
Maewen said quickly, “Yes, but we don’t get on.” That, she hoped, would stop Navis expecting her to go and visit her cousin. But he can’t be right! she thought. It was miles round the coast from Adenmouth to Kredindale. It took ages, even by car. But as they moved on, she saw the long spit of green, scribbled with the ditches of a sea marsh, stretching out into the sea below, where, in her day, the big refinery stood. She had seen it from the train only days ago. It seemed that the old road had cut straight through the mountains.
“Whatever you feel about your cousin,” Navis said, “I imagine you could hope to gather quite a number of followers here.”
Followers! I hope not! Maewen thought. Whatever would I do with them?
“Yes, I reckon you’re going to have to have an army,” Mitt agreed. “Show those earls you mean business.”
They were probably both right, but Maewen just could not see herself leading an army. She would feel such a fool. She rode on wondering how to get out of having one.
The coastline made a grand curve, and the road followed it, but so high that Maewen could not see the big Kredindale Valley she knew must be down there somewhere. There, as they came round the curve, was the waystone marking the way down to the valley and—horrors!—really quite a big crowd of people gathered on the clifftops beside it. As Maewen’s group came into sight, there was a lot of shouting. She heard the name Noreth! over and over again, and—she couldn’t help it—she pulled her horse to a standstill, terrified. Her eyes blurred, and her knees shook.
She said stupidly, “What do you think they want?”
“To talk to you, evidently,” Navis replied.
He seemed to be right. A group of people, men and women, was running toward her eagerly, with one man out in front, and the crowd itself was pressing forward behind them, more slowly, in a jog-trot filled with windy wavings of scarves, hair, arms, ribbons, and some kind of long, snapping banners. Midsummer flags, Maewen thought. They must be holding their Midsummer Fair up here. She wanted to shake her horse into a gallop and leave. Fast. But the crowd was blocking the road. And they all looked so glad to see her.
Oh Noreth! she thought. Why did you have to let me in for this?
Wend strode up beside her. “May I hold your horse, lady, while you get down and speak with them?”
Mitt had seen how she was feeling. “I’ll go with her. D’you mind holding the Countess, too?” he asked Wend.
“And mine,” Navis said, hurling his reins over his mare’s head.
Maewen was too grateful almost to be ashamed at how obvious her terror must be. It felt much better walking toward the eager man with Mitt towering slightly behind her on one side and Navis pacing sedately and briskly on the other.
“Noreth Onesdaughter,” the eager man greeted her. “We heard tell you’d ride the roads this Midsummer, and you must forgive us that we lay in wait for you, in a manner of speaking, but—” Here the small group of men and women caught up and stood panting, nodding, smiling and staring. “We are all the gang head at the mines,” the eager man explained. “I am Tankol Kolsson, and I speak for the heads. Lady, will you talk to Lord Kintor, your cousin, for us? We are at our wit’s end truly and truly do not mean to be lawless the way his new law-woman says we are.”
At this all the others in the group burst out talking, too. “Willing workers all,” Maewen heard. “The land being that poor” and “No sale in summer so he’ll only pay half!” overlaid by “The mines now the main way to make a living” and “Next to nothing if you’ve a family to feed!” This was half drowned by someone saying over and over, “Then Lord Kintor would have to sell his horses and that we do not want,” and someone else saying just as often, “Pay half for what we fetch out and put only a quarter back in winter—that’s starvation, lady!” During this the entire crowd arrived so that Maewen was surrounded and buried in people all shouting, “It’s that new law-woman of his! Make him send her away!” or, “We’re only miners, lady and we don’t know what to do!”
Mines, she thought distractedly. Miners. She remembered the Kredindale of her day, and the big spoil heaps that had been landscaped with grass and trees down by the coast, with the ruins of chimneys and old mine shafts farther up the hills. There was a colliery m
useum somewhere. Maewen remembered Aunt Liss’s saying that when she was a girl, Kredindale had been nothing but coal mines wherever you looked. It looked as if it had started being like that very early on. But she had no idea what all these shouting people expected her to do about it.
“Hold hard!” Mitt shouted. “Do you mind not all talking at once!”
Into the slight hush that this made, Navis called, “Let’s get this straight. You’re in some kind of quarrel with Lord Kintor, and you want this lady to put it right.”
Amid the shouts of agreement Mitt said to the eager man, “You. Tankol. If you’re spokesman, you tell her.”
Tankol was only too ready to tell. The trouble was, he was not one of those people who could tell a thing simply and quickly. Maewen listened for a good quarter of an hour, almost glad of being surrounded by people because the sea wind was cold, even though she found the pressure of all their attention nearly unbearable. At the end of that time she had gathered that her supposed cousin had hired a new law-woman who had told him he would have to sell his horses because there was no demand for coal. There were lots of figures, too, halves, quarters, thirds, which had something to do with the wages miners earned. The main thing Maewen really gathered was that neither Tankol nor anyone else had the least desire to leave Kredindale and follow Noreth as an army.
She ought to have been relieved. She was, in a way. But she was also exasperated. If even the people in Noreth’s birthplace did not consider following her, this really did make her mission impossible. But there had to be more to it than this. Mitt and Navis seemed to be following what Tankol said. Maewen turned to them. “Can you explain?”
“A rather familiar story,” Navis said dourly, “one I thought I’d left behind with the South.”
“Isn’t it just!” Mitt agreed. “He’s saying this Kintor of yours has hired the law to help him diddle the miners. Kintor’s hard up, mind you, because folk can burn peat for nothing. And she’s told him—this law lady—that he can halve their wages in the summer and then put a bit back in the winter, without them being able to do a thing about it. If they complain to him, it’s unlawful. If they hold meetings about it, that’s not lawful either. So what are they to do?”
“They seem to have been smart enough to get round the law by having their meetings as the Midsummer Fair up here, while they waited for you,” Navis said. “But one does wonder how many miners’ wages your cousin is paying his new law-woman.”
Maewen was beginning to feel glad that she could disown this Kintor as her cousin. All the worried faces staring at her had the hollow eyes of people who never quite got enough to eat. Everyone was in holiday best, to judge from the ribbons and embroidery, but they were poor clothes, old and darned and carefully looked after. “Why don’t they want him to sell his horses?” she asked.
“Famous bloodstock,” Navis said. “Everyone is proud of them.”
“Yeah. This is the free North,” Mitt said bitterly.
“Free to some,” Tankol retorted, quite as bitterly. “You’re an Aberath hearthman, lad. You don’t know you’re born.”
Because Mitt looked about to become extremely angry, Maewen said almost without thinking. “Then why don’t you go on strike?”
Every face, Mitt’s and Navis’s, too, turned to her, perplexed. Oh help! she thought. They’ve never heard of strikes yet. Strikes were unheard of until industry started. And when did industry get going? Maewen wondered frantically. Not quite yet, she was sure. But wasn’t it quite early on in Amil the Great’s reign? Yes, because she remembered learning that Amil had encouraged industry, particularly in the North. But, oh dear, all the same. Everyone was waiting for her to explain, and she was going to have to send history in a circle, because she only knew about strikes because there had been strikes, probably because she had told everyone about them one windy afternoon in Kredindale, because…
“It means,” she said, “that you all stop work until my cousin agrees to pay you a fair wage.”
“But we can’t. We’d be turned off work,” Tankol protested.
“Oh come on!” Maewen said. “My cousin needs you to work the mines. If you all stop, he can’t sack you all because he’d starve, too.”
“But,” said one of the women, “it’s like Young Kol said. It’s not lawful.”
They were so slow and sad and doubtful that Maewen wanted to shake them. “Look. It’s not unlawful if one of you is sick and can’t get to work, is it?”
“No.” Everyone agreed to that.
“Then you all get ill at once,” Maewen explained.
This caused a startled, interested silence. Mitt broke it by pointing out what Maewen had always thought was the weak part of strikes. “They’d never get away with that in the South,” he said. “The Earl would just send his hearthmen to hang the ringleaders, sick or not. Maybe your Kintor won’t do that in the North here. But he’d have to do something. If he didn’t, they’d all be ruined, him and them together. It goes,” Mitt added, just as if he had read Maewen’s mind, “in a circle, like.”
It did. Maewen wanted to shake Mitt, too. “But there’s going to be a huge demand for coal,” she said. “Any day—well, any year now—in five years, anyway. I know. There’ll be machines—”
Mitt frowned disbelievingly. “You mean, like Alk’s Irons?”
Maewen did not know what he meant, so she turned back to persuading the rest of them. “It’s true. I really do know. Tell Kintor that if he’ll just pay you properly and wait, people will be yelling for all the coal you can mine, and more!”
She heard murmurs, back in the crowd, dubious and awed. “The One speaks to her. She might know, at that.” But Tankol, who was clearly a more practical type, said, “You wouldn’t be willing to walk down the dale and tell Kintor that yourself, would you, lady?”
“We don’t get on. He wouldn’t listen,” Maewen said. Besides knowing I’m not Noreth, I’ll bet. Great One, this is difficult! “Now what I think you should do is wait to go on strike until people start wanting coal again in the autumn, and Kintor really needs you. Then you all say you’re sick and—and those that want to can come and join me at Kernsburgh and be my army.”
“After Harvest,” someone said. “We could, if the harvest’s in.”
Maewen could feel them all slowly beginning to agree. She felt warm with victory. How was that for brilliance? How was that for a way to recruit an army without having one? How was that for killing several birds with—
Navis canceled all that by asking coolly, “After Harvest? But what, may I ask, will you be doing, Noreth, for the three months in between?”
Doesn’t it take that long to get to Kernsburgh then? Oh hell! “I shall be very busy,” Maewen said.
Navis’s eyebrow slid up. But quite unexpectedly Tankol came to her rescue. “Of course she will, hearthman. We all know she’ll want to be searching out the Adon’s gifts to take to Kernsburgh.”
Both of Navis’s eyebrows soared. “I beg your pardon? Adon’s gifts?”
Tankol, and several other people, gave Maewen knowing smiles. “Southerner, isn’t he?” Tankol said. “Knows nothing. But we all know they answer to the true Queen, and even the strongest claim can be stronger. Very well, lady. You’ve mapped us our way. We work all summer and then fall sick of starvation, and those of us still with our strength bargain with Kintor and then vanish away to Kernsburgh. What say, all? Is this what we do?”
To Maewen’s considerable amazement, there were shouts of agreement. Navis was possibly even more dumbfounded, but he kept his head even though they were suddenly being jostled every which way in a cheering crowd. He seized Maewen’s arm strongly, and quite painfully, just as it seemed that she might be swept away from himself and Mitt, and he shouted, in a ringing voice that came out over all the other voices, “The army is to gather at Kernsburgh. Bring weapons and food if you can. For now, will you please supply the lady Noreth with provisions for her ride.”
Maewen thought that last demand was
a bit much. These people were so poor. All the same, when Navis and Mitt dragged her clear of the crowd, more than half the people in it were already running the other way to see what the pens and stalls under the banners could supply.
They found Moril angrily hanging on to Mitt’s horse. Hestefan was off the cart, hauling at the mule. Wend, who had enough to do with Navis’s mare and Maewen’s horse, said, very irritably for him, “That vile gelding with the teeth bit the mule. Tell the boy to take care of it.”
Wend doesn’t like Mitt, Maewen thought. Doesn’t anyone like anyone on this expedition?
PART THREE
RING AND CUP
8
“Congratulations, Noreth,” Navis said as they rode away from Kredindale. Behind them Hestefan’s cart was laboring and creaking with its load of provisions. “Tell me, do you intend to call for an army in every dale we pass?”
Maewen had been afraid he was going to ask her that. While Mitt and Navis had been riding about choosing cheeses and bags of oats, and rejecting numbers of skinny upside-down hens, Maewen had put in quite a bit of thought. “I don’t think so,” she said judiciously. “Kredindale was special. Now they know I’m calling for an army, word will get round.”
“I admire your faith,” said Navis. “So we—”
“And I admire the way you got all the food organized,” Maewen said quickly, to stop him saying what she knew he was going to say next.
“Think nothing of it. I was an officer in Holand before you were born,” said Navis. “Although,” he added thoughtfully, “it was last year in Adenmouth that really taught me to do ten things at once.” Then, just as Maewen was sure she had distracted him, Navis went on, “But as I was about to say, your plan is that we spend the intervening months searching for certain objects with which to bolster your claim? Just what are these Adon’s gifts?”