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  The One-Armed Queen

  Jane Yolen

  For Elizabeth Harding

  and Louisa Glenn—

  They know why

  One to make it,

  Two to break it,

  Three to carry it away.

  —An old prophecy

  one

  Rivals

  THE MYTH:

  Then Great Alta took the warrior, the girl with one arm, and set her in the palm of Her hand.

  “There is none like you, daughter,” quoth Great Alta. “Not on the earth nor in its shadow. So I shall make you a mate that you might be happy.”

  “And why must I have a mate to be happy?” asked the one-armed girl. “Do you, Great Mother, have a mate? And are you not happy? Perhaps I could be your blanket companion.”

  “To reach too high is to fall too far,” Great Alta replied.

  THE LEGEND:

  When the White Queen Jenna was still alive, she brought her three children to the town of New-Melting-by-the-Sea where she still, herself, had cousins.

  The children were twin boys and a girl whose short cropped hair and leather trousers led her to be mistaken for a third boy.

  The queen planted a rowan by the old Town Hall, the boys each planted a birch. But that night, the girl sneaked out from the encampment and broke off the tops of her brothers’ saplings, leaving only the rowan standing whole.

  In the morning she confessed, her crime and was whipped in front of her mother by the head of the royal guards with switches from those same damaged trees.

  But lo! After the queen’s entourage left the town, the rowan tree died. However, the birches grew round and about one another, twisted and twined.

  You can see them there still by the tumbled wall. They are old and weathered, their trunks supported by metal poles. They are so grown together, they are often mistaken for a single tree.

  THE STORY:

  The queen’s party had passed by the Old Hanging Man early in the day, but the weather was so foul, nothing of the rocks could be seen. Jem and Corrie had been fighting since dawn, the sort of squabbling that seemed to be made up of endless name-calling. Even the queen’s good captain Marek could not keep them separated for long.

  “Is it the weather?” the queen asked, peering into the gloom. “Or the nature of this place?”

  “It is the nature of the boys, Jenna,” Marek said, his long friendship with the queen allowing him such familiarity.

  “It is the nature of all boys,” Scillia complained.

  Her mother shot her a sharp glance.

  “Well, it is,” Scillia muttered. The stump of her left arm ached, which was odd. It was not an old wound that could be expected to pain her in rain or cold. She had been born without the arm and for her to be one-armed was as normal as for her brothers to have two. But somehow today, riding next to her mother on the endless track, her brothers quarrelsome as pups, she felt an ache there as if she had but recently lost the limb. Reaching up with her right hand, she massaged the shoulder and partway down the stump.

  “I will rub oil into your shoulder when we rest, child,” the queen said. Scillia did not like the servants to touch her.

  “I am fine, mother,” Scillia answered. “If only the boys would be silent.”

  But they would not. Or could not. Calling one another “Catch-pole” and “Woodworm,” “Gar-head” and “Toad,” they had settled into a rhythm of slander, beating the names back and forth between them till it got to be a game that eventually had them both laughing.

  Scillia only scowled the more.

  “It is a boy’s nature to make games of troubles,” Marek remarked to the queen. “And a girl’s nature to disapprove of game-playing.”

  Jenna sighed deeply and ran a hand through the fringe of her white hair, “I thought, my dear old friend, that we fought a war not thirteen winters past over such gross statements: A boy does this, a girl does that. It does not become you to speak this way.”

  He smiled wryly at her. “Don’t we say in the Dales: A snake sheds an old skin but still he does not go skinless.”

  She had the grace to laugh back at him. Shaking her head, she added, “Then I will expect to have to skin you now and again. Just for old time’s sake.”

  “As you wish, my queen.” He saluted and kicked his horse into a trot till he had caught up with the boys. By riding between them and telling them some of his old war stories, he managed to turn their attentions elsewhere and the game of calumny was ended.

  “Why do you put up with him, mother?” Scillia asked when Marek was too far away to hear. “Why do you just make light of such things? Why do you …”

  Jenna turned to her daughter. “Do you remember the old saying, Before you make a friend, eat dirt with him?”

  Scillia shook her head. “I always thought that a particularly dim bit of wisdom.”

  “Not if you had eaten the dust of travel and the clods of battle with him. Not if you had buried dear ones and had him weep silently by your side.”

  “Battles and wars. It is all you ever talk about.”

  Jenna’s face went first red, then white. “I talk peace and pacts, child. I talk of rebuilding lives.”

  “When I was young you talked of that. Now it is all rumbling about war. The war that was, the war that will come.” Scillia’s voice was high and harsh.

  The queen’s white horse seemed to take exception to the tone of the girl’s voice and shied from it as if from a serpent on the ground. It took Jenna a moment to calm the mare down. When the horse had at last returned to its good ground-eating walk, she looked at her daughter with as mild an expression as she could muster. “You are still young and therefore I forgive you.”

  “I am thirteen. And the boys are nine and ten. Old enough, mother.”

  “Old indeed,” her mother said. Then, fearful of saying more, she kicked her horse into a canter, passing Scillia, the boys, Marek, and the small bodyguard with ease.

  THE BALLAD:

  THE TWO KINGS

  There were two kings upon the throne,

  Lonely, oh lonely, the queen rides down.

  There were two kings upon the throne,

  When one was gone, one ruled alone,

  The queen rides in the valley-O.

  The one ruled East, the one ruled West,

  Lonely, oh lonely, the queen rides down.

  The one ruled East, the one ruled West,

  And neither ruled the kingdom best,

  The queen rides in the valley-o.

  Ill fares the land where two are king,

  Lonely, oh lonely, the queen rides down.

  Ill fares the land where two are king,

  For names and swords and bells do ring,

  And blood flows down the valley-o.

  THE STORY:

  Lunch was a dismal affair, as they ate at a local farmhouse. Eating with the villagers—usually the lowest of villagers at that—was one of the things the queen always insisted upon. She would never eat at a Village Hall under the watchful eye of some magistrate or other. She considered it the mark of her reign that she cared for the poorest folk first. And she always paid for what food they ate. Unfortunately, that was no guarantee of the cook’s skill.

  Scillia toyed with the stew on her plate. It had not been a good winter; two months of deep frost had frozen even the deepest of root cellars. The vegetables in the stew were tasteless, the chicken clearly had starved to death. And the farm wife, a matronly woman with a half-cast in her right eye, had never been taught the use of strong spice. Scillia thought of the castle’s kitchen with longin
g.

  The boys ate it all uncomplaining. They even asked for seconds. The farm wife gave it to them cheerfully, chucking each of them familiarly on the cheek. She was unaware that it was sheer bulk they were after.

  The pudding was a swollen, pasty thing. Jenna smiled as she ate it, and the boys shared Scillia’s helping after she refused it. Marek ate his without complaint, used to such fare himself since a boy. The bodyguard had their supper of trail rations outside and when the farm wife brought them what was left over from the queen’s table, they were grateful for every bit.

  Once the farm wife disappeared outside with the scraps, Jenna turned to her daughter. “You must learn to disguise what you feel.”

  “Why?” Scillia toyed with one of her braids. “Don’t you always tell me to be honest?”

  “There is honesty—and brutal honesty,” Jenna said. “Something I have learned these last years on the throne. Villagers have quite enough of honest weather and honest frost. But if they believe you believe in them, they will follow anywhere a queen leads.”

  “I will never be queen, so what does it matter,” Scillia said. “I am not deaf; I have heard the talk. I am not your true daughter. I was the daughter of some warrior killed in the war. Jemson will be king.” Her face was bleak and there was the beginning of a line settling between her eyebrows, drawn in by anger or sorrow.

  Jenna was furious. “Who dared tell you that?”

  “Well, is it true?”

  Her mother was silent.

  “True, Queen Jenna. Without disguising what you feel. I am no farm wife to be cozened.”

  “Where did you hear such a thing?” Marek asked gently, seeing that Jenna was too stunned to reply.

  For once the boys remained silent, staring down at their bowls. Jem twiddled with his spoon, as if he could not will his fingers to be still, but young Corrie sat like a stone. When he dared look over at his sister, her face was white and hard.

  “Where?” Marek asked again, only not so gently this time.

  “Everywhere,” Scillia said. She shrugged but it was no casual gesture. “There is even a rhyme about it.”

  “A rhyme about it?” Jenna’s voice was barely a whisper.

  Jem’s voice sang out:

  “Jenna’s girl is nowt a queen,

  Hair is black and eyes are green,

  Only one arm to be seen,

  And she’s got no father!”

  Corrie kicked him under the table and the last word ended on a scream.

  “Toad!” Jem cried. “Stupid, sucking toad.”

  “Marek, take the boys outside,” Jenna said, and when no one moved, she added imperiously, “Now!”

  Marek stood, his eyes like flint, and ushered the boys out, though it was clear that neither one of them wanted to go. Jem even opened his mouth to protest, and Marek clipped him on the back of the head. That Marek would do such a thing to one of the princes so startled Jem, whatever he had been going to say was forgotten. He put his hand to the back of his head and escaped through the door like a hare through its bolthole.

  Jenna waited until the door closed behind them, then took a deep breath, and faced her daughter. Scillia’s eyes were clouded with tears, but there were no tears on her cheeks.

  “You are my daughter,” Jenna began.

  “The truth, mother,” Scillia whispered hoarsely.

  “That is the truth,” Jenna said. “Someone else gave birth to you, a fine warrior, murdered in the Gender Wars. You were strapped to her back. I took you from her and slew the man who had killed her. And from that moment on, you were mine.”

  “And what was my name?” One tear had started out of Scillia’s left eye and ran straight down her cheek. She did not bother to wipe it away.

  “Your name then—and now—Scillia.” Jenna did not move. The light coming in from the window lay across her shoulders like a shawl. She would have welcomed its warmth, but it seemed cold. So cold for a spring day. She shuddered with the chill.

  Only then did Scillia scrub at her face with her fist, leaving a dark smear where the tear had traveled. “Why was I not told?”

  “What was I to tell you?” Jenna asked. “You are my daughter. My only daughter. Nothing anyone says can change that.”

  Scillia’s shoulders trembled visibly.

  “Perhaps I should have said something. Your father wanted you to know. And Skada.”

  “Your dark sister and father agreeing on something?” That almost brought a smile from the girl.

  Jenna took that almost-smile and gave it back to her. “When it is about something I have left undone, they always agree,” she said. “Oh, my darling child, I would not harm you for the world.” She stood shakily and went over to Scillia. Kneeling beside her, Jenna encircled her daughter’s small waist with her arms.

  It took almost a minute before Scillia trusted herself to reach down and begin stroking her mother’s long white hair. It was stiff and wiry to the touch.

  They sat that way, not speaking, till the light from the windows dimmed and the cottage was dark with shadows.

  “Come, Mother,” Scillia whispered at last, “time to have the farm wife light the fire. You can tell Skada all.”

  “I am sure she knows it already,” Jenna said with a sigh. Then almost as an afterthought, she murmured, “And will never let me forget it.”

  “Neither will I,” said Scillia.

  Jenna could not tell if that was a promise or a threat.

  THE HISTORY:

  Memo: Dalian Historical Society

  For a biography of my late father, who was a past member of the Society and two-term General Secretary, I am seeking anecdotal material as well as letters concerning his lifelong quarrel with certain individuals in the Society on the subject of the true history of the Dales.

  As you are all aware, he felt that history should remain uncorrupted by legend, myth, balladry, and folklore, considering them “cultural lies.” And while his own lens may have been somewhat shortsighted, I am not so sure that he was otherwise incorrect in his assessment of matters concerning the indigenous populations of the Dales.

  Because of his untimely and tragic death, I have taken on the task of organizing his papers and publishing what will be both a critical and yet loving book about his work, as only a daughter—and fellow historian—can.

  Thanking you in advance,

  THE STORY:

  The farm wife came back into the house to light the fire. Then bowing her way out again, she left Jenna and Scillia together.

  Once the fire had caught well enough to throw shadows across the grate, there was a low chuckle from the chair next to Jenna’s.

  “Sister, too late by half and too short for a whole,” Skada said.

  “And too cryptic by far for me to understand,” Jenna retorted. She pushed her fingers once again through the fringe of hair on her forehead and Skada imitated her. “I hate that kind of talk.”

  “She means, mother, that you should have told me years ago and you have not told me all of it now.”

  “She’s always been the brightest of your children,” Skada said. “Though Corrie’s a love.”

  “Don’t push me.” Jenna turned angrily to her dark sister.

  “I only say what you will not.” Skada glowered back at her. “And Jem …” Jenna’s face was suddenly drawn in on itself, like an apple left out all winter. Skada stopped whatever it was she’d been about to say.

  “Jem is going off to the Continent when we are back from this trip. A little less family and a little more schooling is all he needs,” Jenna said steadily.

  “Then I am not to be queen,” Scillia interrupted. “Nowt a queen.” Her voice was eerily like Jem’s. “He’ll learn about ruling with a hard hand there. I could never do such a thing.”

  “Of course you are to be queen,” Jenna said. “You are the oldest, and that’s all there is to it. Your brothers will make you excellent counselors.”

  “If they ever give up squabbling,” Skada added.
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  “We never have,” Jenna said.

  She rose and Skada rose with her. They matched pace for pace to the door. Jenna turned suddenly, but not too quick for Skada. Their faces held the same concern as they gazed back at Scillia.

  “When I die …” Jenna began. “And your father as well. You will …”

  “If you die, mother. You are a hero. You are a legend. Such people do not die. They just … are no longer physically in the Dales. But they aren’t dead.” Scillia’s face in the shadow looked much older, as if a mask of age had suddenly slipped down over it. “They are always with us.”

  “Definitely the brightest!” Skada said.

  Jenna turned on her heel and flung open the farmhouse door. The afternoon light slanted down to outline her in the doorway. When she stepped outside, no one was by her side.

  “Mother!” Scillia called. There was pain in her voice but little hope. “Mother …”

  “We ride,” Jenna cried out. And without thanking the farm wife, she got onto her horse, kicking it hard enough to surprise it into a canter, leaving Marek to organize the children and guard to follow.

  They rode till past supper and into the dusk. As there was no moon to call Skada forth, Jenna rode at the forefront alone.

  She was tired. Thirteen years as a queen had exhausted her. She had long found the throne a troubling seat and missed being able to spend weeks off in the deep woods. On the other hand, Carum reveled in the details of the royal work: the sums and substitutions of a kingdom’s finance, the niggling judgments, the exacting language of the law. But Jenna hated it, escaping whenever Carum could spare her.

  This time he had let her out of a meeting with the mayors and aldermen of the northwest Dales. She had taken both the boys and Scillia with her, promising Carum that they would all stay with the guard. That promise was dragged from her, but she argued more from form than need. Both Jenna and Carum knew she needed the trip and they hoped it would be good for the children as well.

  “I will go back to Selden Hame,” Jenna had said. “Scillia has never been inside. It has been years since I’ve gone myself. Once we are safe within, the boys and the guard can stay in the village.”