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Crown of Earth




  CROWN OF EARTH

  The Shield, Sword, and Crown:

  Shield of Stars

  Sword of Waters

  The Shield, Sword, and Crown

  CROWN OF EARTH

  Hilari Bell

  Aladdin

  New York London Toronto Sydney

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  ALADDIN

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  First Aladdin hardcover edition October 2009

  Copyright © 2009 by Hilari Bell

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  ALADDIN is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc., and related logo is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc. For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact

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  Designed by Lucy Ruth Cummins

  The text of this book was set in Celestia Antiqua.

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bell, Hilari.

  Crown of earth / Hilari Bell. -- 1st ed.

  p. cm. — (The shield, sword, and crown; bk. 3)

  Summary: Fifteen-year-old Prince Ederan and fourteen-year-olds Arisa and Weasel finally realize the true meaning and value of the symbols of power in Deorthas when the Falcon demands the sword and shield in exchange for Weasel’s life.

  ISBN 978-1-4169-0598-1 (hardcover)

  [1. Conduct of life—Fiction. 2. Kings, queens, rulers, etc.—Fiction. 3. Signs and symbols—Fiction. 4. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. 5. Pirates—Fiction. 6. Fantasy.] I. Title.

  PZ7.B38894Cro 2009

  [Fic]—dc22

  2009000912

  ISBN 978-1-4169-9694-1 (eBook)

  To the volunteers of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, past, present, and to come

  CHAPTER 1

  The Seven of Waters: the traveler. A journey begins.

  They had Weasel.

  “I’ve already sent out troops,” said General Diccon. “If they haven’t left the city, we’ll stop them. If they have, we’ll be right on their heels. We’ll catch them. We’ll probably have them back by morning.”

  He sounded as if he believed it, but one look at the girl’s white face told Edoran that she didn’t—and she knew her mother better than any of them.

  The crowded office stank of burning lamp oil, sweat, and betrayal. Holis was talking to the stupid peasant boy the Falcon had used as her messenger, trying to persuade him to reveal where the Falcon had taken the kidnapped prince. Or rather, the boy she thought was the kidnapped prince.

  They hadn’t intended the kidnapping to go so far. Arisa had been certain that hiding the sword and shield would stop her mother’s plot. But it had all gone wrong and the Falcon’s men had taken Weasel, who was neither their leader’s daughter nor the prince. If Diccon’s troops didn’t catch them…

  “What do we do if they aren’t back by morning?” Edoran demanded. “What if she escapes, with Weasel as a hostage?”

  Justice Holis was controlling his expression in front of the Falcon’s messenger, but Edoran could see the grimness beneath the mask. “As a hostage… I’m afraid Weasel only matters to me. If he’s returned alive, unharmed, I might be able to commute her sentence to life imprisonment.”

  He didn’t seem to notice that Arisa flinched, but Edoran did. And judging by his sudden frown, General Diccon saw it too.

  “But I can’t even promise that,” Holis went on, “since I’m not the only one who’ll be involved in that decision.”

  Edoran’s heart contracted. He was talking about the horde of shareholders and courtiers who’d swarmed through the palace ever since his father’s death. Before his father’s death too, but then it hadn’t mattered because his father could control them. After the king died, Regent Pettibone had controlled them, and it had mattered a great deal. But there was nothing a five-year-old prince could do about that.

  Holis had taken over the regency when the Falcon killed Pettibone, but he didn’t yet have the kind of political power Pettibone had wielded. He might never have it, because he didn’t want it, and Edoran had almost loved him for that alone. Now he saw the downside to that lack of cutthroat ambition, because the nobles who’d have to approve Holis’ judgment on the Falcon wouldn’t give a tinker’s curse if Weasel lived or died. They’d set terms of surrender that the Falcon would refuse—she’d always struck Edoran as the fight-to-the-death type, and her daughter was the same. She would refuse, and Diccon’s troops would attack, and the worthless clerk who’d allowed himself to be kidnapped in Edoran’s stead would be the first to die.

  “No.” It came out sounding remarkably firm, considering that his hands were clammy and his heart was pounding. “I’m involved in that decision. In fact, I’m going to make it.”

  “Your Highness.” Holis looked pained. “The shareholders—”

  “Can rot!” Edoran rose to his feet. “General Diccon, you have till tomorrow’s dawn to capture the Falcon and return her and her hostage to the palace. If they aren’t here by sunrise, you will meet me in the courtyard with a troop of sufficient strength to guarantee my safety. Then we’ll go after the Falcon, and when we find her I will personally oversee the negotiations for her surrender. Is that clear?”

  The general looked appalled at the mere prospect. “Yes, Your Highness, but—”

  “I command this.” If he stayed, if he let them argue, they would win. Edoran turned and walked out. Maybe the deliberate stride that was all his wobbling knees could manage would be mistaken for confidence, or authority, or something. But he had to get out. He had to get out of that hot little room where his best friend was being condemned to death out of political necessity.

  Political necessity resulting in death was nothing new to Edoran—though before Weasel came, when he’d had no friends, it hadn’t seemed as important as it did now.

  Edoran stalked away, ignoring the guard who stood outside the office door—who must have failed to close that door after his prince, for General Diccon’s voice echoed into the corridor. “Well, I’ll be hanged. The little runt sounded like a king!”

  Heat flooded Edoran’s face, but he kept walking. Pretending that he didn’t hear the whispers, didn’t know what people thought of him, was even more familiar than the fear that his own murder might suddenly become politically necessary.

  Only four months ago the speech he’d just made would have signed his death warrant.

  As long as you’re of use to me, the old regent’s voice murmured in his memory.

  But after Holis had taken the regency from Pettibone, that fear had slowly subsided. Holis’ political power was weak enough that he couldn’t rule Deorthas unless he did so in Edoran’s name. And… he really didn’t seem like the murdering type. He kept telling Edoran that he was a prince—maybe he meant it. But whether he meant it or not, he had to keep up the pretense of Edoran’s authority or his own would fail.

  If I stand firm, if I insist, they h
ave to do it.

  If they didn’t, if he caved in, then Weasel might die.

  Edoran quickened his pace through the maze of hallways, ignoring both the courtiers’ startled looks and the quaking in his guts.

  His new valet must have heard something; he’d opened the gilded doors of the prince’s suite and was peering out, waiting for him.

  “I need you to go to the stable,” Edoran told him curtly. “Inform the grooms that I’ll need Ginger, saddled and ready, in the courtyard at dawn tomorrow. And Rudolphus, too. I may need a remount if I’m going to keep up.”

  The valet gawked at him. Edoran hadn’t yet figured out who he was spying for, and at this moment he didn’t care.

  “Now!”

  “Ah, of course, Your Highness. Might I inquire—”

  “No,” said Edoran. “I gave you an order. Obey it.”

  The valet departed, and Edoran just made it to the privy before vomiting up the remains of his early dinner. Stress had always affected his stomach, but there wasn’t much to come up. It was almost midnight now. Swapping costumes, helping Arisa hide the sword and shield from her mother’s men, interrogating that worthless boy—it had all taken far too long. He and Arisa had spent more than an hour locked in a closet!

  He winced at the memory of her weeping. She was the craziest person he’d ever known, but she loved her mother, and Weasel was as much her friend as he was Edoran’s. More.

  Some part of Edoran had wanted to hate her for taking that extra share of Weasel’s attention, but even he could see that wouldn’t be fair. And in her strange, half-wild way, she’d tried to help him. Was there any way he could get the Falcon out of this when he saved Weasel?

  He’d be willing to try, for Arisa’s sake. The Falcon had wanted to take over Deorthas, but it sometimes seemed to Edoran that everyone he knew was trying to take over Deorthas, and she hadn’t threatened to kill him or anyone else… so far.

  If she killed Weasel, all bets were off. But that wouldn’t happen. Edoran wouldn’t let it happen, even if he had to throw screaming fits to force them to listen.

  By the time his valet returned, he’d stripped off Weasel’s costume, donned his riding clothes, retrieved the smallest bag he could find from the little room where his clothes were stored, and started packing. He’d been in that room only a couple of times in his life, though its door opened off his own bedroom; it took him almost five minutes to locate the cupboard that held the luggage.

  “I have conveyed your orders to the grooms,” his valet announced. “Ah, might I assist you with that?”

  “Please,” said Edoran, gratefully abandoning his attempt to fold a shirt. “I’ll be traveling rough. I don’t know for how long. Just riding clothes. Nothing fancy.”

  “Packing for at least a week? Indeed.” The valet nodded, went into Edoran’s closet, and came out with one of the large trunks he’d already rejected.

  “Not that,” said Edoran. “I’ll be traveling on horseback, with an army troop.”

  He wasn’t about to allow General Diccon to refuse to take him because he had too much luggage.

  “Very good, Your Highness,” said his valet. “Your luggage can go in the carriage.”

  “We’ll be traveling fast,” Edoran repeated, trying not to snap at the man. “There won’t be any carriage.”

  “But there must be, if Your Highness is with them,” said his valet serenely. “How else could I, and your cook, and the groom accompany you? How else could your foodstuffs be carried?” He smiled indulgently at Edoran’s foolishness.

  “I won’t be taking any servants,” said Edoran, through gritted teeth. “I’ll eat whatever the soldiers eat. We have to travel fast!”

  “Of course, Your Highness.” The valet folded an embroidered vest neatly into the trunk. “Do you know if you’ll be stopping at inns? Or will you stay at the shareholders’ manors?”

  Edoran finally dismissed the man, coming close to the screaming fit he’d planned to use only as a last resort. He managed to cram one pair of clean britches and several shirts into a small bag, along with his underclothes and the toiletries he’d need to keep himself clean. He could find someone to wash and press them after he’d caught up with Weasel.

  Perhaps he should have worn the burglar costume Weasel had given him—it was both comfortable and practical—but his own riding clothes felt more… familiar. It had been Arisa’s idea to disguise herself in Edoran’s costume, to be kidnapped in his place, since her mother’s men would never dare harm her—but she’d been too big for Edoran’s clothes. They’d fit Weasel perfectly, even though both he and Arisa were only a year younger than Edoran’s fifteen.

  Soon he was ready to leave, but dawn was still hours off and his eyelids were beginning to droop. For some reason he always woke up at sunrise, but he needed to be down in the courtyard when the sun was coming up, not fumbling into his clothes and splashing water on his face. He didn’t want to summon his valet and have the man try to pack for him again. Was there any servant he could trust to wake him before dawn?

  No. There was no one he could trust.

  In the end Edoran spent the rest of the night, fully clothed, in a chair in his sitting room, dozing off and then waking when his stiff muscles protested. It was more than an hour before sunrise when he gave up on sleep and picked up his pack and the fur-lined cloak he’d selected for traveling in late winter. The rains that had drenched the city for the past few weeks might have abated but it was still cold, and if they traveled away from the coast there might be snow. It wouldn’t fit in his satchel, but it could be tied on the back of his saddle if he grew too warm. If he’d forgotten anything, he could borrow it from some trooper once they were on the road.

  Edoran’s heart lightened as he let himself out of his rooms and crept down the long corridors to the main doors. The palace was silent. Not even the servants who cleaned the hearths and brought hot water were stirring yet. The palace had seemed large to him as a child, but this was the first time he’d encountered it when it was… empty.

  He felt like a character in some fable, as if when he reached the courtyard he’d find it overgrown with vines, signifying that a hundred years had passed, or that all the servants had been turned into mice while he slept in that uncomfortable chair. But when he opened the doors, only the normal darkness of night transformed the familiar park and garden.

  An hour and fifteen minutes till dawn. He knew it without even glancing at the sky, for he always knew when the sun would rise and set.

  The troop captains were probably waking their men right now, and they’d be packing—unless they’d done that last night? Edoran had never dealt with even the palace guards, much less the common army soldiers. That would change soon, for General Diccon would bring them here at dawn. No matter what he might think of his prince’s command, he had to obey it.

  The Falcon had believed that Diccon was loyal to Prince Edoran. Edoran could have told her that the general was loyal to Deorthas, and couldn’t have cared less about Edoran himself.

  The grooms would be bringing his horses soon too. Ginger, chosen for her easy paces, and Rudolphus, for his stamina. If the grooms were late… could Edoran saddle a horse himself? He never had, and when he’d watched it looked pretty complicated. But surely the stable roused early. They had his orders. The horses would arrive.

  The sky had gone from black to slate gray. They were probably saddling his horses right now. And the troops would be readying their own horses, for their prince had given them an order and he hadn’t backed down or caved in. So they had to obey.

  The sky grew brighter. Birds began to sing in the trees of the park. Edoran could hear muffled sounds from the palace, where the lower servants had started working.

  But it wasn’t dawn yet. The horses and the troops he’d ordered weren’t late. Not quite. Even if they were late, they had to obey his direct command. He was the prince! As long as he held firm, what else could they do?

  The sun rose, light flooding t
he courtyard. Sometimes men were late. Especially starting a journey that might last for an unknown amount of time, at sunrise. They were probably in the midst of frantic preparations, the officers shouting that they were keeping Prince Edoran waiting, that if they didn’t get a move on, when he turned twenty-two and became king he’d fire the lazy lot of them. He would, if they didn’t get here soon. They had to come soon. What else could they do?

  The sun rose higher. No one came into the courtyard. No frantic grooms, hurrying up with his horses. No troops. No general, apologizing for the delay. Edoran couldn’t even see any servants peering through the windows, though he’d bet they were there, enjoying his humiliation. He’d fire them, too, when he became king, and have Diccon hanged! Or at least thrown in jail.

  He imagined the weeping grooms walking through the front gate, carrying bundles that held all their worldly goods. Diccon, begging his king for mercy.

  Weasel, who’d started his life as a pickpocket, had always been terrified of going to jail….

  How could he save Weasel? How could he do anything, if they simply ignored his orders? If they all behaved as if he’d never given any orders? And they were doubtless doing it at Justice Holis’ command. When he turned twenty-two, he’d have Holis hanged as well!

  But for now he was powerless. He’d have to slink back into the palace and pretend… that he hadn’t been serious? That he really was the incompetent joke everyone thought he was?

  He couldn’t even saddle his own horse! How could he expect to save Weasel when…

  Weasel and Arisa had walked almost half the length of Deorthas last fall, when Weasel had rescued Justice Holis. At least Edoran could walk.

  And in the eyes of the common folk of Deorthas he was the prince. If he could find the Falcon himself, if he could be there when the negotiations for her surrender took place… Holis couldn’t ignore orders that Edoran gave in public without undermining his own authority, because his authority rested on Edoran’s.